EM Currency Handbook 2014
Transcription
EM Currency Handbook 2014
Deutsche Bank Markets Research Emerging Markets Foreign Exchange FX Spot FX Volatility Date 19 December 2013 Drausio Giacomelli EM Currency Handbook 2014 Diverging Currencies Strategist (+1) 212 250-7355 Henrik Gullberg Strategist (+44) 20 754-59847 Guilherme Marone Strategist (+1) 212 250-8640 Mallika Sachdeva Strategist (+65) 6423 8947 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. DISCLOSURES AND ANALYST CERTIFICATIONS ARE LOCATED IN APPENDIX 1. MICA(P) 054/04/2013. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Table of Contents Introduction EMFX in 2014: Diverging Currencies ............................................ 2 Summary Tables Macroeconomic Indicators ............................................................ 7 Monetary Frameworks................................................................... 8 Asia China .............................................................................................. 8 Hong Kong ................................................................................... 14 India ............................................................................................. 17 Indonesia ...................................................................................... 22 Malaysia ....................................................................................... 27 Pakistan........................................................................................ 32 Philippines .................................................................................... 35 Singapore ..................................................................................... 40 South Korea ................................................................................. 44 Sri Lanka ...................................................................................... 49 Taiwan .......................................................................................... 52 Thailand........................................................................................ 57 Vietnam ........................................................................................ 62 Emerging Europe and Africa Croatia .......................................................................................... 66 Czech Republic ............................................................................ 68 Egypt ............................................................................................ 70 Ghana ........................................................................................... 72 Hungary ....................................................................................... 74 Israel ............................................................................................. 76 Kazakhstan ................................................................................... 79 Kuwait .......................................................................................... 81 Latvia............................................................................................ 83 Nigeria .......................................................................................... 85 Poland .......................................................................................... 87 Qatar ............................................................................................ 89 Romania ....................................................................................... 91 Russia ........................................................................................... 93 Saudi Arabia ................................................................................. 96 South Africa ................................................................................. 98 Turkey ........................................................................................ 100 Ukraine ....................................................................................... 103 United Arab Emirates................................................................. 105 Latin America Argentina ................................................................................... 107 Brazil .......................................................................................... 112 Chile ........................................................................................... 115 Colombia .................................................................................... 119 Mexico ....................................................................................... 123 Peru ............................................................................................ 126 Page 2 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies EMFX in 2014: Diverging Currencies In light of the events of 2013, investors have increasingly questioned whether emerging markets are still an attractive investment. Growth has weakened, especially in larger economies, just at the time when growth expectations in developed markets have improved. Capital flows to EM have slowed sharply over the years and EM exposure has been reduced substantially on fears of Fed tapering. Several countries have seen mass protests, as growth has not kept pace with popular aspirations raised during earlier phases of rapid expansion. EM assets have underperformed. EM currencies – as the most important shock absorbers – will likely remain vulnerable into 2014, especially while tapering (and forward guidance) uncertainty lingers. But a lot seems already priced in and we expect EMFX spot return to be back in positive territory in 2014 (although barely so at 2%), with Asia yielding 2%, LatAm -1%, and EMEA 4.5%. This is substantial improvement vs. the -7% spot return so far in 2013. Carry should add an extra 4%. The golden age of EM investment is undoubtedly behind us, but to apply broad, sweeping generalizations to suggest that EMFX is doomed to underperform unduly extrapolates cyclical forces and ignores the tremendous macro advances that have been made across EM over the past decade, strengthening institutions and the deeper integration into the global economy and capital markets. Emerging Markets are maturing. Sources of outperformance and sources of risk are more complex and varied. Flows: What next? We expect EM currencies to face another difficult year, but we find the hurdles ahead to be lower than in 2013. US rates will likely remain a major risk factor into the New Year, but forward rates have already moved to Deutsche Bank’s 10Y yield forecast (3.25%). Moreover, EMFX is starting the year with better valuation, and – while EM growth will likely remain diverse – many countries are likely on the cusp of an upturn. This is particularly important, as capital flows have been highly correlated with growth (chart). The future of EM will be one of divergence rather than collective underperformance. Some economies will struggle in the near future including high profile cases such as Brazil, Russia, and South Africa, where growth models are exhausted and governments show little appetite for reform ahead of elections. The rise US rates poses additional headwinds for the overly reliant on short-term external financing, such as Turkey and Ukraine, to name a few. Better prospect for flows as growth recovers Elsewhere, however, growth will remain strong, albeit below past peaks. Asia remains best placed: the reform effort in China and India is significant; and the smaller, more open economies will benefit disproportionately from strengthening demand in the US and Europe. Beyond Asia, Central Europe is emerging from a period of painful deleveraging and is poised to see activity accelerate. Reforms in Mexico will leave it better placed to benefit from US recovery. Growth in Chile, Colombia, and Peru, will remain robust. Even Argentina could turn the corner if the electorate turns its back on a decade of failed policies in late-2015. The value of EM as a diversifier will increase once uncertainty about the future of US monetary policy eases into 2014, in our view. Outflows have been concerning, but they seem cyclical in nature. EM still represents a very small fraction in global portfolio (likely around 3% or lower) and the recent outflows have been concentrated in retail – thus shifting the composition in favor of more stable institutional investors. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Weighing the hurdles ahead % GDP 12% EM Growth Gross Portfolio inflows, %GDP 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0% Dec-04 Dec-05 Dec-06 Dec-07 Dec-08 Dec-09 Dec-10 Dec-11 Dec-12 Source: Deutsche Bank, Haver Analytics UST sensitivity and tail risks to weigh on EMFX, but change is in sight. EMFX performance has historically (pre-2008) more closely tracked US equities (as a proxy for growth prospects), but this has changed dramatically in recent years – particularly in 2013. Not only have EMFX-UST correlations surged beyond 90% in many cases, but EMFX-US equities betas have flipped to negative while FX-equities correlations dropped substantially (chart). Page 3 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies lower CA deficits, however, depreciation rates could still be substantial. In our estimation, reducing CAs by 2% of GDP requires depreciation rates in the low teens – especially in LatAm ex-MXN, but also in TRY, ZAR, and – less so – RUB. Where do we stand? CA adjustment has underwhelmed in Brazil, South Africa, Turkey, and Indonesia, among others. In contrast, India has been impressive. The more open E3 currencies also seem well positioned to benefit from a continued gradual upturn in global demand, good valuation, and reduced imbalances. So are Mexico and Chile, and – to a lesser extent – South Korea, Malaysia, and Thailand, in our view. EMFX: Now more sensitive to UST than US equities 100% 75% 50% EMFX vs SPX 25% EMFX vs UST 10 (abs val) 0% -25% -50% -75% -100% Jun-12 Aug-12 Oct-12 Dec-12 Feb-13 Apr-13 Jun-13 Aug-13 Oct-13 Source: Deutsche Bank, rolling 6m index correlations The list of EM currencies most sensitive to US yields is long: INR, TRY, ZAR, RUB, BRL, MXN, MYR, PHP, and IDR (with CE3 and KRW as exceptions). Looking ahead, however, the milder re-pricing in US yields we foresee and strengthening growth should tame UST yield sensitivity and restore the old norm. What if USD strength finally materializes? Under increasing US-EU growth and interest rate differentials, the EUR/USD may finally buckle. EMEA FX is naturally more exposed to this risk, followed by Asia and then LatAm. If commodities are strong enough, LatAm FX could outperform even the USD under USD strength (as in 2005), but this is not our baseline scenario. Instead, we find the best proxies for possible EUR/USD downside to be selected LatAm currencies and – barring other risks – RUB, TRY, and ZAR vs. CE3 FX, as indicated in the chart below1. EM crosses for USD strength corr EM cross vs EUR ( 2bd ret, 1y window) -50% MXNPLN (.1%) TRYCZK (1.9%) RUBHUF (1.1%) RUBPLN (1.%) -60% CLPCZK (1.2%) TRYHUF (1.3%) TRYPLN (1.2%) CLPHUF (.6%) -70% ILSHUF (-.4%) Structural bottlenecks are binding, especially in larger economies. The chart bellow shows real tradeweighted FX appreciation and total factor productivity across EM. Asia is trading mildly stronger than precrisis levels, but it has also posted the fastest pace of productivity. EMEA FX lies in the middle, while LatAm FX is most concerning, with productivity clearly lagging currency appreciation. Country-wise, the contrast between China and Brazil is most striking, with BRL appreciating about 60% since 2005 amid scarce gains in productivity vs. its partners. Russia also faces structural bottlenecks, and we see the ruble more exposed to oil prices in the absence of a more genuine reform agenda. In contrast, the prospect of reforms in Mexico, China, and – later on – India could lift the pace of productivity and underpin a stronger FX. Reserves: Adequate, but with notable exceptions Speculative flows have been dominant during 2013, but this picture can change. If foreigners reduce more aggressively their positions in local markets or locals exit on concerns about elections and macro vulnerabilities, reserves could be under strain. Reserves adequacy figures are most concerning where currencies are least flexible (rather than in the so-called Egypt, Ukraine, Argentina, and “fragile five”) 2 . Venezuela seem most vulnerable in this sense. Brazil reserves seem adequate, but the risk of capital flight after so many years of substantial wealth creation still bodes for caution. ILSCZK (.3%) CLPPLN (.5%) ILSPLN (-.4%) COPHUF (.3%) COPCZK (.9%) COPPLN (.2%) -80% -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 z-score (1y, levels) Source: Deutsche Bank, Haver Analytics. Better valuation, but BoP risks remain. Valuation is definitely more appealing, but we see no clear signs of overshooting. We find most EM currencies mildly undervalued or fair. Should tighter funding impose 1 See “EM Proxies for USD Strength” for more in-depth analysis. Page 4 2 See EM Outlook for 2014, published on December 5th. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Valuation vs. productivity trade-offs Carry: Not a leading, but a key contributor to returns 10.0% REER index - EM regions 1-yr total return 1-yr spot return 5.0% 130 0.0% 120 -5.0% 110 -10.0% 100 -15.0% 90 -20.0% carry increases 80 2002 EEMEA REER 2005 2008 Asia REER 2012 Latam REER Asia LatAm 120 110 100 90 2000 2003 2006 2009 SGD TWD ILS CZK PEN THB KRW PLN COP HUF MXN CLP TRY ZAR IDR Source: Deutsche Bank, Haver Analytics To conclude, EM’s narrower growth differential vs. developed markets and overall anemic economic performance throughout 2013 have weighed on flows, currencies, and investor sentiment. Several of the largest and most visible emerging economies are now dealing with policy excesses of the previous years and lack of reforms, but many others (in our view, the majority of the EM universe) are likely on the cusp of a marked upturn. This should also trigger an upturn in flows, global trade, and – as EM faces more binding capacity constraints than developed markets – tighter monetary stances. Eff. productivity index 130 EMEA BRL INR 70 2000 RUB -25.0% 2012 Source: Deutsche Bank, Haver Analytics It is important not to underestimate the benefits of carry. Carry has been (ex-ante) a poor leading indication of performance. Ex-post, however, it has contributed almost 500bp to this year’s returns (chart) – roughly accounting for EMFX’s outperformance vs. credit and local markets. If EM growth does recover and forward guidance holds as we expect, search for carry may again extend to EM currencies. EM growth prospects will likely be quite diverse in the year ahead, and we expect investors to selectively channel funds to currencies with more attractive valuation, and where the prospects of growth acceleration seem most appealing when weighed against sensitivities to US monetary policy uncertainty. EM currencies will continue to be the buffer against external shocks, but the hurdles ahead seem lower than in 2013 – assuming forward guidance holds. This is, in our view, the most material risk for emerging currencies in 2014. For a more comprehensive and detailed outlook of EM in 2014 – including our main themes and trade recommendations for the year-ahead – see: http://pull.db-gmresearch.com/p/7821-6652/95838865/DB_EMMonthly_2013-12-05_0900b8c0879fe006.pdf Drausio Giacomelli, New York, +1 212 250 7355 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 5 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Macroeconomic indicators for year-end 2014 La t in Am er ic a Ar gent ina Br a z il Chile Colom bia Mexic o P er u Nom . GDP (US D bn) 493 2,157 291 402 1,324 202 Inf la t ion (YoY%) 27.2 5.8 3.0 3.3 3.9 3.0 O /N r a t e *** 19.00 10.50 4.25 4.00 3.75 4.50 G ovt . debt /G DP , % 18.5 62.1 6.0 35.5 36.5 23.1 Dom es t ic 6.1 59.4 4.5 26.0 25.0 10.4 E xt er na l 12.4 2.7 1.5 9.5 11.5 12.7 Tot a l ext .debt /G DP 27.7 21.5 40.6 22.4 21.7 27.7 Budget ba l./GDP , % -3.8 -3.8 -0.5 -2.3 -4.0 0.6 G r owt h (5y a vg), % 4.1 2.6 3.9 3.9 1.6 5.6 CA ba l./G DP , % -1.6 -3.2 -3.8 -2.7 -2.0 -5.5 FDI/G DP , % 1.1 2.8 4.8 3.6 1.4 5.4 E ME A Cz ec h Cr oa t ia Republic E gy pt Hunga r y I s r a el Ka z a kh Niger ia P ola nd Nom . GDP (US D bn) 59 175 279 134 323 242 319 506 Inf la t ion (YoY%) 2.3 1.6 10.1 2.5 2.1 6.3 7.0 2.5 O /N r a t e *** 6.00 0.05 8.25 3.00 1.00 5.50 12.00 2.50 G ovt . debt /G DP , % 60.6 46.9 91.8 76.2 65.3 12.4 20.3 47.4 n/a 34.1 80.1 41.8 53.8 n/a n/a 29.2 Dom es t ic n/a 12.8 11.7 34.4 11.5 n/a n/a 18.2 Tot a l ext .debt /G DP E xt er na l 105.0 54.6 17.2 120.0 29.4 63.2 2.5 76.6 Budget ba l./GDP , % -4.7 -2.7 -13.2 -2.9 -3.0 4.8 -1.8 4.0 G r owt h (5y a vg), % -0.7 -0.2 2.9 -1.0 3.5 5.3 7.1 2.7 CA ba l./G DP , % -0.7 -1.0 -0.4 1.0 1.9 2.0 3.6 -1.6 FDI/G DP , % n/a 2.9 1.1 1.3 3.1 5.5 n/a 1.1 E ME A S out h Rom a nia Rus s ia S a udi Af r ic a T ur key U AE U kr a ine Nom . GDP (US D bn) 190 2,269 737 366 824 405 189 Inf la t ion (YoY%) 3.2 4.8 3.5 5.2 6.9 2.5 2.8 O /N r a t e *** 4.00 5.50 2.00 5.00 7.75 1.00 6.50 G ovt . debt /G DP , % 41.5 12.0 1.7 46.5 34.9 16.8 36.0 Dom es t ic 22.0 8.6 1.7 42.8 24.9 12.0 17.7 E xt er na l 19.5 3.4 0.0 3.7 10.0 4.8 18.3 Tot a l ext .debt /G DP 74.4 33.6 13.0 36.9 49.7 25.4 80.0 Budget ba l./GDP , % -2.2 -1.1 7.7 -4.0 -2.3 7.1 -4.5 G r owt h (5y a vg), % -0.8 1.1 5.8 1.8 3.8 3.6 -1.0 CA ba l./G DP , % -3.0 1.7 9.8 -5.5 -6.5 14.1 -7.5 FDI/G DP , % 1.9 0.3 2.0 0.2 1.2 1.7 2.4 As ia H ong S out h China Kong I ndia Indones ia Ma la y s ia P hilippines S inga por e Kor ea Tha ila nd 10,271 306 2,015 885 336 302 304 1,305 404 512 Inf la t ion (YoY%) 3.8 3.5 4.9 6.3 2.3 3.8 3.3 2.5 2.6 0.9 8.6 O /N r a t e *** 3.25 0.50 7.00 7.50 3.50 6.00 0.90 2.50 3.00 1.88 7.00 G ovt . debt /G DP , % 60.0 Nom . GDP (US D bn) Ta iwa n V iet na m 175 18.0 8.7 66.4 22.0 66.7 52.3 116.1 36.5 46.0 48.1 Dom es t ic 17.5 8.2 62.6 11.0 65.1 31.1 115.1 35.5 45.0 46.2 27.0 E xt er na l 0.5 0.4 3.8 11.0 1.6 21.2 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.9 33.0 Tot a l ext .debt /G DP 10.7 408.4 23.8 32.8 21.2 17.1 390.0 30.4 34.6 27.6 39.0 Budget ba l./GDP , % -1.8 3.2 -4.8 -2.4 -3.8 -2.4 6.9 -0.1 -3.2 -2.0 -6.2 G r owt h (5y a vg), % 9.2 2.9 7.3 5.9 4.2 4.5 4.5 2.9 2.9 3.0 5.9 CA ba l./G DP , % 2.2 1.9 -3.0 -3.3 4.5 4.1 15.5 4.5 0.2 9.4 2.0 FDI/G DP , % 1.1 -8.2 1.2 1.6 -2.1 0.7 3.3 -1.1 -0.7 -2.5 4.6 *** Current Pollicy Rate Source: Deutsche Bank Page 6 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Monetary Frameworks La t in Am er ic a Ar gent ina Br a z il Chile Colom bia Mexic o P er u U r ugua y Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Tenur e (y ea r s ) 6 4 10 4 6&8 5 8 Boa r d* (# m em ber s ) 10 7 5 7 5 7 3 Aut onom y 1 Monet . t a r get 2014 t a r get M2 growth 29.4% YoY Inflation 4.5% +/- Inflation Inflation Inflation Inflation Inflation 3% +/-1% 2.0% - 4.0% 3% +/-1% 2% +/-1% 4% - 6% Annua l m eet ings 12 2% 8 12 12 12 12 Irregular Inf la t ion r epor t s Quarterly Quarterly Quarterly Quarterly Quarterly Three Quarterly P olic y r a t e Call Selic TPM Overnight Reference Call Ma in pol. ins t r . M2 Selic TPM Overnight Reference Call FX int er vent ion Continuous Frequent Occasional Frequent Frequent E ME A Frequent Occasional Cr oa t ia Republic E gy pt Hunga r y Is r a el Ka z a kh Niger ia P ola nd Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 6 6 n/a 6 5 n/a 5/3 6 14 7 15 7 6 9 12 10 FX stability Inflation Core inflation Inflation Inflation Inf. & fx Inf & FX Inflation Not explicit 2% +/- 1% 6% - 8% 3% +/- 1pp 1% - 3% 6% - 8% 8 8 12 Tasa de fondeo Tasa de fondeo Cz ec h Aut onom y 1 Tenur e (y ea r s ) Boa r d 2 (# m em ber s ) Monet . t a r get 2014 t a r get Annua l m eet ings n/a Inf la t ion r epor t s None P olic y r a t e Repo Ma in pol. ins t r . Repo FX int er vent ion Not explicit 2.5% (+/-1%) 12 n/a 6 12 Quarterly Quarterly None 3 per year Base rate Discount Ref. Rate MPR 7-day Ref. Base rate Discount Ref. Rate MPR 7-day Ref. Frequent E ME A Continuous Continuous Occasional Quarterly Not published Quarterly 2w Dep O/N Lend & Rate 2w Dep Deposit O/N Lend & Rate Deposit Continuous Never Frequent Occasional Rom a nia Rus s ia S a udi Af r ic a Tur key U AE U kr a ine Yes Yes No Yes Yes No Yes 5 4 4/5 5/3 3 n/a 7 9 12 6 14 7 7 16 S out h Aut onom y 1 Tenur e (y ea r s ) Boa r d 2 (# m em ber s ) Monet . t a r get Inflation Inf. & fx USD peg Inflation Inflation USD peg Fx stability 3% (+/-1%) No explicit 3.75 / USD 3-6% 5.5 3.6725/USD No explicit Annua l m eet ings 2 per quarter n/a n/a 6 12 n/a n/a Inf la t ion r epor t s Quarterly Quarterly Quarterly Quarterly Quarterly None None P olic y r a t e 1w deposit Key rate Rev. repo Repo O/N lend Repo Discount Ma in pol. ins t r . 1w deposit Key rate Rev. repo Repo O/N lend Repo Discount FX int er vent ion Frequent Continuous Continuous Frequent Frequent As ia Continuous Continuous 2014 t a r get Hong Aut onom y 1 Tenur e (y ea r s ) Boa r d 2 (# m em ber s ) Monet . t a r get 2014 t a r get S out h China Kong India Indones ia Ma la y s ia P hilippines S inga por e Kor ea Tha ila nd No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Partial Yes Yes Yes No 5 - 5 5 - 6 2 4 4 5 - 15 8 - 6-9 10 7 9 7 7 15.00 - Core M2 & Price Inflation Inflation stability M2 & Inflation Ccy Board M2: USD/HKD 14% (est.) 7.75-7.85 Multiple Inflation Multiple Inflation SGDNEER appreciation Inflation 2% p.a. - 5% +/-1% - 3-5% appreciation 2.5-3.5% 0.5-3% Ta iwa n V iet na m M2: 2.5-6.5% Annua l m eet ings 4 12 8 12 6 8 (till Apr '13) 2 12 8 4 Inf la t ion r epor t s Quarterly Monthly - Quarterly Monthly Quarterly Monthly Semiannual Quarterly Quarterly P olic y r a t e 1Y Deposit Base Rate Repo/RRP Overnight Overnight Repo/RRP SGD-NEER 7D Repo 1D Repo Discount Ma in pol. ins t r . 1Y Deposit, RRR, OMO Ccy Board Repo/RRP BI rate OPR Repo/RRP Continuous 1 2 Frequent band 7-day repo 1-day repo Frequent Frequent OMO Prime Rate Prime Rate Continuous at policy FX int er vent ion SGD-NEER 0.1 at policy Occasional Frequent Occasional Frequent band Frequent Frequent Central Bank autonomy is defined as legal autonomy; in practice, some “ autonomous” Central Bank decisions are influenced by politics and/or pressure from the Treasury. Including Governor Source: Deutsche Bank Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 7 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies China During the 1950s and 1960s, China adjusted its FX rate frequently to encourage exports and restrict imports, pegging to USD and then to GBP. With the breakdown of Bretton Woods in the early 1970s, the anchor was shifted to a broad basket. Under a new opening policy in the 1980s, authorities created a multiple FX structure and moved to a controlled float to address trade competitiveness. The early 1990s was marked by a brief shift to a more market-determined FX regime as China sought to meet GATT accession criteria. The “official rate” was moved to the prevailing swap rate on Jan 1, 1994 and the yuan was to be managed against an undisclosed basket of currencies; however, shortly after the heavy volatility in global FX markets in 1995, China quietly abandoned its basket and reverted to a straightforward USD peg at 8.28. The People’s Bank of China was created in September 1983 and was charged with setting monetary policy. PBoC’s main policy tool is the 1Y deposit rate, though in practice it relies on several policy tools including administrative measures and liquidity management via OMOs and Reserve Ratio Requirements. The central bank tends to pursue several monetary targets in addition to inflation, such as M2 growth. USD/CNY exchange rate 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 80 85 90 95 00 05 10 USD/CNY spot rate and 3M NDF premium 8.5 Spot Rate Forward Points (RHS) 1,000 8.0 500 0 7.5 -500 7.0 In July 2005, China adopted a managed float regime, with the daily fluctuation range of USD/CNY capped at +/-0.3% around a fixing. The fixing is announced daily at 9:15am before trading begins. The bandwidth was widened in May 2007 to +/-0.5% and again in April 2013 to +/-1% around the fixing. There is growing speculation of another band widening in the nearfuture. According to PBOC, the RMB is managed with reference to a basket of currencies, although its constituents are undisclosed and adherence to a basket framework has not been consistent. Authorities tend to regard FX as a monetary tool against inflation. Internationalization of the RMB has become an important policy objective and progress towards capital account convertibility is underway. The creation of the offshore CNH market in 2004 was an important milestone. The RMB is now freely tradeable offshore in HK, Singapore and Taiwan. The offshore RMB deposit base has grown and RMB cross-border tradesettlement scheme has steadily expanded, with RMB now the second most used currency in trade finance globally. RMB capital financing in the form of CNH bond issuance has become widespread for both domestic and foreign corporates. RMB ODI and FDI are permitted. The liberalization of QFII and RQFII (Renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor Scheme) quotas has steadily been upsized. Page 8 1,500 -1,000 -1,500 6.5 -2,000 -2,500 6.0 00 02 04 06 08 10 12 Onshore USD/CNY spot vs. offshore USD/CNH spot 6.8 spread 6.7 CNY Spot 6.6 CNH Spot 6.5 6.4 6.3 6.2 6.1 6 Sep-10 Mar-11 Sep-11 Mar-12 Sep-12 Mar-13 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 -200 -400 -600 -800 -1000 -1200 -1400 Sep-13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) regulates exchange controls (http://www.safe.gov.cn, while the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) is responsible for implementing monetary policy and ensuring overall stability in the financial sector (http://www.pbc.gov.cn). In March 2003, the Central Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) was established to assume the financial supervisory role once undertaken by PBoC (http://www.cbrc.gov.cn). Since July 2005, China has adopted a managed float regime, with the daily fluctuation range against the USD initially set at +/-0.3%. In May 2007 the interbank spot-trading band was widened to +/-0.5%, and was widened further in April 2011 to +/-1%. The range against non-USD currencies was initially set at +/-1.5% but in Sep 2005, this has since been widened to +/-3%. The Chinese authorities intend to reduce exchange controls at a gradual pace to allow market forces to play a bigger role. There are three types of foreign currency accounts for Foreign Investment Enterprises (FIEs): capital accounts (for investment and repatriation), current accounts (for trade) and loan accounts (for receiving and repaying loans). Cross border transactions such as those related to trade are permitted, and will use the CNY onshore rate. This, however, must (1) occur through designated clearing banks and (2) be supported by appropriate documentation. Onshore CNY products FX spot Regulatory: Only licensed onshore counterparties are allowed. . CNY spot can currently be traded against USD, HKD, JPY, EUR, GBP, CAD, MYR, RUB and AUD on CFETS, China’s inter-bank FX trading system. Corporates executing CNY spot are required to submit supporting documentation, and the document checking process has been largely simplified for many of the current account items in the past year. Currently, AUD/USD, EUR/USD, EUR/JPY, GBP/USD, USD/CAD, USD/CHF, USD/JPY, USD/HKD, and USD/SGD are tradable on CFETS. Certain kinds of conversion under non-trade and capital items still require pre-approval from SAFE. Daily spot trading in USD/CNY is executed through the National Foreign Exchange Trading Center (NFETC) using the China Foreign Exchange Trade System (CFETS). CFETS is the trading system that electronically links the various designated foreign exchange banks (DFEBs). The market is open from 9:30 am until 4:30 pm Beijing time. Every morning at 9:15am (Local) a fixing is announced based on weighted average of primary dealers' contribution with PBOC discretion and published on Reuters page < SAEC >. USD/CNY is then allowed to trade within a +/-1% band around this fixing Avg. ticket size: USD 10 – 20mn Bid/ask spread: CNY 0.0002 – 0.0006 Avg. daily vol: USD 15-25bn Ref. source: Reuters page <CNY=CFXM>, DB Reuters page < DBSHFX>, Trading hours: 9:30am – 4:30pm, Beijing time FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: Banks with a derivative license can apply for a separate license to trade USD/CNY forwards in the interbank market after they sign the Chinese version of Master Agreement (NAFMII Agreement) regulated by PBOC. Banks are permitted to trade USD/CNY FX swaps after 6 months of trading forwards. Banks can also apply for trading USD/CNY forwards with corporate clients and are permitted to trade USD/CNY FX swaps after 6 months of trading forwards when SAFE filing procedure is conducted. Avg. ticket size: USD 10 – 20mn Avg. daily vol: USD 6-10bn Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 9 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Tenor: Up to 1 year with liquidity. Longer than that has poor liquidity, but normally price up to 3 years Bid/ask spread: CNY 10-20 pips below 6mth tenor, 10-30pips 6mth to 1year tenor Ref. source: DB Reuters page < DBSHFX >, Broker Reuters broker page <CFETSICAP05> FX options Avg. ticket size: USD 5 – 10mn Avg. daily vol: USD 200-400 mn Tenor: Up to 1 year with liquidity. Bid/ask spread: 0.2-0.4 vols Ref. source: Reuters page <CNYVOL> IRS Regulatory: Financial Institutions (including DB China) can trade IRS with other FIs, while only FIs who have bond market maker licenses or agent banks can trade IRS with non-FI clients. Non-FI can only conduct IRS for hedging purpose. Avg. ticket size: CNY 50-100mn Tenor: Up to 5 years, but more liquid for 1, 2 and 5 year tenors Bid/ask spread: 2 – 5bps Ref. page: Reuters Page <CNYIRS> (onshore), Broker pages <CFETSICAP01> Fixing page: Reuters page <CNREPOFIX=CFXS> Short-term money market instruments (BA/CP/repo) Regulatory: Repo markets exist in both the inter-bank and exchange markets. SHIBOR market only exists in the inter-bank market. Liquidity: Tenors range from O/N to 12 months for inter-bank market and 1 day to 182 days for exchange market, with the 1 day and 7 day repo being the most liquid funding tool. The SHIBOR market has tenors of 1 day to 12 months. The most actively traded tenors are the O/N and the 1-week instruments. Avg. daily vol: CNY 400 - 500bn for inter-bank repo Government bond Regulatory: Government bonds are traded in both the inter-bank market and exchange markets. From a size perspective, the inter-bank market is much deeper and larger than exchange market. Only players registered with CFETS are allowed to trade inter-bank and banks cannot enter exchange market Foreign investors can currently access China’s domestic bond market (interbank and/or stock exchange) under three separate programmes: (1) the PBoC interbank programme, (2) the QFII programme, and (3) the R-QFII programme. However, the process to obtain the license and quota is heavily regulated by the People’s Bank of China (PBoC), China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) and State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE). PBoC’s interbank bond programme allows four types of institutions (foreign central banks, Renminbi settlement banks, Renminbi clearing banks and insurance companies) to invest in the interbank bond market within quotas approved by the PBoC. The Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors (QFII) programme is available to investors that meet minimum requirements (AUM, years of operation, etc.) outlined by the CSRC. The programme requires licence approval by the CSRC followed by quota approval by SAFE. Additional PBoC approval is needed if the investors require access to the interbank bond market in addition to securities traded on Shanghai/Shenzhen stock exchanges. Page 10 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies For the Renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (R-QFII) programme, given the recent push to further internationalised RMB, UK, Singapore and Hong Kong-based financial institutions) are now eligible. Into 2014, it is likely other countries such as Taiwan would be eligible to the programme. According to the regulation, application requires PBoC/CSRC/SAFE approval. Avg. ticket size: CNY 30 – 100m depending on tenors in inter-bank market Bid/ask spread: 1 – 2bp for shorter than 5Y and 2-5bps for longer tenors Loan Regulatory: Only licensed banks are allowed to offer CNY loans. Deposit Regulatory: Only licensed banks are allowed to take CNY deposits onshore, although a limited scheme of offshore CNY deposit-taking has been operating in Hong Kong since February 2004. The ratio of current assets to current liabilities must be greater than 25% for both foreign currency and local currency businesses, on a daily basis. The loan/ deposit ratio cannot be higher than 75%. Offshore Non-Deliverable CNY products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: Onshore corporates and onshore banks are not allowed access. Fixing: Every morning at 9:15am (local) a fixing is announced based on weighted average of market makers with discretion and published on Reuters page < SAEC >. Avg. ticket size: USD 10-20mn Bid/ask spread: CNY 0.001 – 0.002 Avg. daily vol: USD 2-3 bn Ref. source: Reuters page <DBNDF>, <PNDF> Fixing page: Reuters page <SAEC>, 9:15am Beijing time, 2 business days before value date. Cross fixing: EBS at time of fix Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Regulatory: Onshore corporates and onshore banks are not allowed access. Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn Bid/ask spread: 0.20 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 200mn Ref. source: DB autobahn Fixing page: Reuters page <SAEC>, 9:15am Beijing time Offshore NDS Regulatory: Onshore corporates and onshore banks are not allowed access. Avg. ticket size: USD 10m for tenors up to 5Y, USD 5mn for 7-10Y tenors Tenor: Up to 10 years Bid/ask spread: 10- 20bps Avg. daily vol: USD 100m Ref. source: Reuters page <INDIRS> Fixing page: Reuters page <SAEC>, 9:15am Beijing time, Settlement: T+2, Floating Rate: 6M USD LIBOR, Frequency: Semi-annual, Day-count: Act/365 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 11 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Clearing and settlement regulation There are two clearing and settlement platforms - the China Government Securities Depository Trust and Clearing Company (CDC) and the China Securities Depository and Clearing Company (CSDCC). The former clears transactions in the interbank market in real time while CSDCC is the sole depository, clearing and registration company for securities traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges and provides settlement on T+1 basis. The CDC is under the regulatory supervision of the PBoC and CBRC, while the CSDCC is under the supervision of the CSRC. Taxation Foreign investments in government bonds are not subject to tax on interest income. For non-government debt such as corporates bonds, there is a 10% withholding tax and 5% business tax on interest income. However, tax on capital gains for foreigners has not been officially clarified yet. Offshore Deliverable CNH products On 19 July 2010, HKMA/PBoC allowed the transfer of RMB funds between accounts and across banks for any purpose in the offshore. This led to the development of an offshore OTC CNH market, and below are some of the regulations for the offshore market (http://www.hkma.gov.hk/media/eng/doc/key-information/guidelines-andcircular/2010/20100719e1.pdf) Non-resident individuals, corporates and institutions are now allowed to buy/sell RMB in the offshore CNH market, and are allowed to freely transfer RMB between deposits accounts in Hong Kong. Non-residents are allowed to invest in CNH bonds or RMB structured products issued in Hong Kong. Corporates with underlying trade settlement will be able to buy/sell RMB at the onshore USD/CNY spot rate, provided that the annual RMB quota assigned by the China to the RMB clearing bank in HK (Bank of China) has not been exhausted. Clients buying or selling RMB without underlying trade transaction can only buy or sell RMB at the offshore USD/CNH rate. Companies are allowed to issue CNH bonds in Hong Kong, but approval from SAFE is required before the RMB funds raised can be remitted back to Mainland China. The introduction of a daily USD/CNH fix has also facilitated the development of a CNH derivatives market On 14 June 2012, HKMA launched a RMB liquidity facility to help banks in managing their short-term liquidity needs, including rolling over the borrowings under this facility for the purpose of trade settlement (http://www.hkma.gov.hk/media/eng/doc/key-information/guidelines-and-circular/2012/20120614e1.pdf and http://www.hkma.gov.hk/media/eng/doc/key-information/guidelines-and-circular/2012/20120614e2.pdf). On 25 April 2013, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) further eased restrictions on the CNH market by removing the Net Open Position (NOP) limit and the 25% Liquidity Ratio on CNH. This was to provide equal treatment to CNH compared with other currencies with respect to liquidity and FX risk management. This again is to aid banks’ management of liquidity and should ultimately result in better asset deployment. (http://www.hkma.gov.hk/media/eng/doc/key-information/guidelines-and-circular/2013/20130425e2.pdf). Since the announcement of a series of policy measures by Mainland regulators in 2010, HKEx has strived to engage market participants in preparing for the listing, trading and clearing of RMB products in its markets. There have been a number of RMB-denominated instruments, including debt securities, equities and real estate investment trust, listed and available for trading in Hong Kong since March 2011. PBOC also simplified cross-border RMB business procedure in (http://www.pbc.gov.cn:8080/publish/zhengwugongkai/1373611409412/_fileupload/D1B79613.pdf) FX spot Regulatory: Fixing: Page 12 July 2013. No restrictions for spot CNH transactions in Hong Kong. The offshore RMB fixing rate is calculated by averaging the quotes after excluding the highest two and lowest two quotes provided to Treasury Markets Association of Hong Kong by contributing banks. This is published on Reuters page <CNHFIX=> at 11.15am local time. Fixing has to be done 1 business day before value date. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Avg. ticket size: USD 5-10mn Avg. daily vol: USD 2.5-3 bn Bid/ask spread: 5-12 bps Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBQM1>, Bloomberg page <DBHK>, Broker Reuters page <TRADCNY3> Trading hours: 9:30am – 5:00pm, HK time FX forward/swaps forward Regulatory: No restrictions for forward CNH transactions in Hong Kong. Avg. ticket size: USD 50 mn (1-3mth), USD 20 mn (6-12mth) Avg. daily vol: USD 2bn (1-3mth), USD 1.5bn mn (6-12mth) Tenor: o/n – 2year Bid/ask spread: 3-5 pips for 1M, 5-10 pips for 3M, 10-15 pips for 6M, 10-20 pips for 1Y Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBQM1>, Bloomberg page <DBHK>, Broker Reuters page <TRADCNY3> FX options Regulatory: Deliverable CNH options are available without restriction to any non-individual counterparty as long as they have physical CNH nostro account in Hong Kong Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn Bid/ask spread: 0.2 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 500mn Ref. source: DB Autobahn Fixing page: Reuters page <CNHFIX> Offshore CCS Avg. ticket size: USD 10-20 mn Tenor: 1-5Y Bid/Ask Spread 10-15bps Avg. daily vol: USD 15-20 mn Ref. source: Reuters <DBQM1> for short dated CCS Fixing No fixing ; traded as CNH fixed leg Clearing and settlement regulation CNH bonds can be settled using Euroclear and Clearstream internationally or in Hong Kong using the domestic settlement system of the HKMA (the Central Money Markets Unit CMU). As a result this ensures issuer takes no payment risk at settlement. Taxation Provided that the investor is not carrying on business in Hong Kong, capital gains are not taxed in Hong Kong. Coupon or capital gains tax on the bonds however could still be subject to tax at the place of residence of the issuer. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 13 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Hong Kong While several foreign currencies circulated in Hong Kong’s early years of existence, a local currency unit pegged to silver came into existence in 1905. Subsequently the HKD was pegged to GBP (1935-1972), then to USD (1972-1974), then allowed to float freely between 1974 and 1983, and then shifted back to a peg vs. USD in 1983. Since 1983 the Hong Kong dollar has been linked to the US dollar at the rate of approximately HKD7.8 to one US dollar. Essentially, in all but 11 years of its existence, Hong Kong has maintained a pegged exchange rate regime of some sort. In recent years, a growing chorus of investors and analysts have noted that Hong Kong is no longer as cyclically aligned with the US as it used to be. Consequently there is a growing belief that at some stage Hong Kong will shift from a USD peg to a peg against the Chinese renminbi. HKMA has however dismissed the possibility of a near-term policy shift, citing the convertibility of the Chinese yuan as a necessary precondition for a re-peg to the RMB. The current focus of the HKMA is to develop the offshore yuan market in close collaboration with Mainland authorities. The primary monetary policy objective of the HKMA is to maintain exchange rate stability within the framework of a Currency Board system. The HKMA does not set interest rates, though it may influence inter-bank liquidity through the issuance of short-term money market instruments call Exchange Fund bills. There is no explicit inflation target. The government tends to rely on fiscal tools (subsidies, grants, and administrative curbs on property speculation) to contain inflation risks. The present Linked Exchange Rate System (LERS) is essentially a currency board with the Hong Kong dollar pegged to USD within a narrow band of 7.75 (strong side) and 7.85 (weak side). The HKMA is obliged to intervene in the inter-bank FX market at these levels to enforce the trading band. The Authority also retains the discretion to intervene between these limits if circumstances are deemed to warrant it, though it rarely does so in practice. The Hong Kong deliverable. dollar is fully convertible and USD/HKD exchange rate 7.85 7.80 7.75 7.70 90 95 00 05 10 USD/HKD spot rate and 3M fwd premium 7.85 Spot Rate 100 Forward Points (RHS) 0 -100 7.80 -200 -300 7.75 -400 7.70 -500 00 02 04 06 08 10 12 USD/HKD 3M historical vs. implied volatility % 3.0 Spread (RHS) % 3M Implied 3M Realized 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 -0.5 -1.0 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Page 14 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) regulates monetary policy, exchange rate policy and banking activities (http://www.info.gov.hk/hkma/). HKMA currently operates a linked currency exchange rate regime using a currency board mechanism under the direction of the Financial Secretary. Formal exit costs from the current system are remarkably low by the standards of most other fixed exchange rate systems or currency boards. The Financial Secretary is free to announce a re-peg or float at any time, with Article 111 of the Basic Law simply stating that the currency must be backed by a 100% reserve fund (without specifying the reserve asset or exchange rate). The market is open from 8:30 am until 11:00 am and 2:00 pm to 4:00pm Hong Kong time. HKMA’s interbank foreign currency operations can be monitored on Reuters page <HKMAOOC>. HKD products FX spot Current account: No restrictions Capital account: No restrictions Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn Bid/ask spread: 0.0001 – 0.0002 Avg. daily vol: USD 1-3bn Ref. source: Reuters page <HKD=> FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: No restrictions Avg. ticket size: USD 50m for the 1 year tenor, much larger for short-dates Tenor: Overnight to 2Y Bid/ask spread: Up to 0.0010 for tenors up to 1Y Avg. daily vol: T/n: USD 3 – 5bn; 1Y: USD 100mn; >1Y: not much liquidity Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBQM>, DB Bloomberg page <DBHK >, Broker Reuters page <PYHKD> FX options Regulatory: No restrictions Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn Bid/ask spread: 0.4 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 300mn Onshore CCS Regulatory: No restrictions Tenor: 1 – 10Y Bid/ask spread: 5 – 8bp Avg. daily vol: USD 50 – 200mn Ref. source: Reuters page <PYHKD> Fixing page: Reuters page <HIBOR=>, Settlement: T+2, Floating Rate: 3M HIBOR vs. 3M USD LIBOR, Frequency: Quarterly, Day-count: Act/365 vs. Act/360 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 15 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies IRS/HKD SPS (Single Period Swap) Regulatory: No restrictions Avg. ticket size: For HKD FRAs: HKD 300 mio, but not much liquidity now. 1-2y HKD IRS: HKD 300 mio , 3y+ IRS: HKD 100-200 mio Tenor: 1 – 10 years Bid/ask spread: 5 – 10bp Avg. daily vol: HKD 3 –8bn Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBQM1>, DB Bloomberg page <DBHK >, Broker Reuters page <PYHKD> Fixing page: Telerate 9898 / Reuters page <HIBOR=>, Settlement: T+2 for HKD SPS, HKD IRS – T+0 for morning time and t+1 for afternoon Floating Rate: 3M HIBOR, Frequency: Quarterly, Daycount: Act/365 Short-term money market instruments (BA/CP/repo/Exchange Fund bills) Regulatory: No restrictions Avg. ticket size: HKD 200 – 300mn Bid/ask spread: 2 – 5bps Avg. daily vol: HKD 5bn Government bond market (including Exchange Fund Notes) Regulatory: No restrictions Avg. ticket size: HKD 20 – 50mn Bid/ask spread: 3 – 10bp Avg. daily vol: HKD 30K DV01 Ref. source: Reuters page <0#HKTSY=>, Bloomberg page <DABA2> Loan Regulatory: No restrictions Spread: HKD loans are priced based on the HIBOR / Prime plus / credit premium Deposit Regulatory: No restrictions for the deliverable market Liquidity: Good out to 1 month (Poor liquidity out to 1y) Clearing and settlement regulation Foreign investors can choose to settle using Euroclear, Clearstream, or the domestic settlement system provided they have an onshore account. The domestic clearing and custodian system in Hong Kong is operated by HKMA Central Money Markets Unit (CMU). The Real Time Gross Settlement system provides delivery-versus payment settlement (DVP) for Hong Kong dollar- and US dollar-denominated debt. Taxation Provided that the investor is not carrying on business in Hong Kong, capital gains are not taxed in Hong Kong. Interest income and gains on disposal or redemption of Hong Kong Government Bonds/HK EFBNs (if applicable) are specifically exempt from Hong Kong profits tax. Page 16 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies India Between 1947 and 1975 the rupee was linked to GBP. Import restrictions and export subsidies were punctuated with periodic devaluations to address balance of payments crises. Its anchor was then switched to a trade-weighted FX basket, but the central bank was forced to devalue the rupee in 1991 and shortly thereafter introduced a two-tier system of foreign exchange. The current regime dates back to March 1993 when the government reintroduced a unified, market-determined managed float. Since a new Foreign Exchange Management Act was introduced in June 2000, regulators’ focus has shifted from conserving foreign exchange to developing an orderly market to facilitate trade and investment. The monetary framework of the Reserve Bank of India is built around a multiple indicators approach, including inflation, credit and deposit growth. There is no official inflation target, but the central bank’s comfort zone for WPI inflation is between 5-5.5%. RBI sets its policy primarily via the repo/reverse repo rate corridor, but supplements it with liquidity management tools such as Cash Reserve Ratios, and most lately in 2013 with changes to the Marginal Standing Facility Rate. USD/INR exchange rate 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 90 95 00 05 10 USD/INR spot rate and 3M NDF premium 70 Spot Rate 400 Forward Points (RHS) 350 65 300 60 250 200 55 150 50 In the early to mid 2000s, FX policy was oriented at ensuring that the rupee maintained its competitiveness in inflation-adjusted terms. After the 2008 financial crisis, the current account deficit steadily deteriorated and RBI adopted a more pragmatic approach to reserves management. Reserves were not aggressively accumulated in 2009-2010 when large inflows led to appreciation. As capital flow volatility began to increase in late 2011 alongside a deepening deficit, the rupee was allowed to depreciate, often sharply. Indian authorities have tweaked capital account regulations during times of currency weakness for instance liberalizing external commercial borrowings, or increasing FII quotas to encourage inflows. During the extreme stress of mid-2013, a scheme to incentivize non-resident Indian USD deposits into the country was used, alongside management of oil USD demand to curb currency pressure. The rupee is convertible for current account transactions, but is relatively restricted on the capital account. Portfolio investment is permitted via a Foreign Institutional Investor (FII) program, which is more liberal for foreign equity than debt investors. Quotas exist for foreign investment in Indian government and corporate debt; these have been steadily expanded in recent years but are underutilized. Corporate borrowing in foreign currency is subject to regulations and caps. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 100 50 45 0 40 -50 -100 35 00 02 04 06 08 10 12 USD/INR 3M historical vs. implied volatility % Spread (RHS) 30 % 3M Implied 3M Realized 25 20 15 10 5 0 -5 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Page 17 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) regulates exchange controls, financial transactions and the banking system. (http://www.rbi.org.in). Anything not specifically allowed under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) is deemed to be disallowed. Onshore FX contracts including forwards and derivatives, to the extent permitted, can be entered into by resident entities. Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) and Qualified Foreign Investors (QFI), subject to conditions are also granted access to forward contracts & swaps to hedge currency risk on the market value of their entire investment in equity and/or debt in India. FII guidelines are available on the Securities Exchange Board of India website (http://www.sebi.gov.in. Foreign Direct Investors (FDI) & Non Resident Indians (NRIs) can also hedge their exposure subject to compliance with specific conditions. Further Non Residents can hedge their imports / exports denominated in Rupees with AD banks in India subject to certain conditions. Corporations must show documentary evidence (invoices) for FX and self-certified INR interest rate swap transactions. Regular importers are allowed to hedge 25% of the average of their past 3 years’ imports/exports or their previous year’s turnover, whichever is higher, under the Past Performance facility. All contracts booked under this facility will be on a fully deliverable basis. Gains on cancellation cannot be passed to the client. Exporters can cancel and rebook forward contracts up to 50% of contracts booked in a Financial Year. Forward contracts booked by any resident or FII, regardless of type and tenor can no longer be rebooked, once cancelled. The latest guidelines on External Commercial Borrowing http://rbi.org.in/scripts/BS_ViewMasCirculardetails.aspx?id=8101 SEBI and RBI have introduced rupee-dollar futures contracts on local exchanges since August 2008. These are available on three different exchanges – National Stock Exchange (NSE), Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX) and United Stock Exchange (USE). Further, additional contracts for other currencies (GBP/INR, EUR/INR and JPY/INR) have been introduced. Currently, FIIs and NRIs are not allowed to trade these futures. Details of futures contract can be found at respective websites of the exchanges.. SEBI and RBI have allowed USD/INR options to be traded on NSE and USE since October 2010. (ECBs) can be reviewed at: Onshore INR products FX spot Current account: No prior approval requirements but participants must have documentary evidence of the underlying transaction for remittances. Capital account: All FX transactions on the capital account are subject to general or specific permission from the RBI. Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Bid/ask spread: INR 0.0025 – 0.0100 Avg. daily vol: USD 4bn (range: 2 – 8bn) Ref. source: Reuters page <RBIB> Trading hours: 9:00am – 4:30pm, Mumbai time FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: Per FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Tenor: Overnight to 5 years (Overnight to 1yr is very liquid) Bid/ask spread: INR 0.01 – 0.02 for tenors less than 1yr, INR 0.10 – 0.20 for tenors more than 1yr Avg. daily vol: USD 1.5bn Page 18 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Ref. Source: FX options Regulatory: Reuters page <INR1F=> Authorized Dealers (ADs) are allowed to offer foreign currency rupee options. However only plain-vanilla European Calls/Puts, and structures using these options as building blocks are allowed in the FCY/INR (where FCY represents foreign currency) options space. Use of cost reduction structures, i.e., cross currency option cost reduction structures and foreign currencyINR option cost reduction structures have been permitted to hedge exchange rate risk arising out of trade transactions, External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs). Corporate clients are not allowed to be net receivers of premium. Contingent foreign exchange exposure arising out of submission of tender bid in foreign exchange can also be hedged. All other documentary requirements as per FX spot are applicable to FX options. Avg. ticket size: Ticket-size varies, as this is a non-OTC market Tenor: Up to 5 years Bid/ask spread: 0.5 – 0.75 vols for tenors less than 1Y, 0.6 – 1.0 vol for tenors more than 1Y Avg. daily vol: USD 250 mn Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBBO>, DB Bloomberg page < DBBY>, fixing time is 11.30am Mumbai time at the FEDAI fix Reuters Page <INRFIXM=FEDA> Onshore CCS Regulatory: Cross currency swaps not involving INR can be entered into only by resident entities having FCY borrowings. FCY/INR swaps can be arranged by banks between onshore counterparties having either an INR or FCY exposure. No swap transactions involving upfront payment of INR or its equivalent in any form shall be undertaken. The above transactions once cancelled, shall not be re-booked or re-entered. Avg. ticket size: INR 500mn Tenor: 1 – 10 years Bid/ask spread: 10 – 30 bps Avg. daily vol: INR 3-5 bn (sporadically traded) Ref. source: Reuters page <MIOCS=>, <MIFOR=> IRS/FRA Regulatory: Self-certification of underlying exposures. Only plain vanilla IRS/FRAs are allowed. Avg. ticket size: INR 500mn Tenor: 1 month – 10 years Bid/ask spread: 1 – 2 bps for tenors less than 5Y, 10bp for tenors more than 5Y Avg. daily vol: INR 70 bn (for OIS), Ref. source: Reuters page <MIOIS=> Fixing page: Reuters page <INRONDFIX=> Short-term money market instruments (CP/repo) Regulatory: Open to local residents, NRIs and SEBI registered FIIs only Liquidity: Good for CP market, Deep Overnight-repo market for govt. securities RBI recently permitted repos for corporate debt, market to evolve for repo of CPs and other corporate debt Avg. ticket size: INR 250m for CP, Bid/ask spread: 5 – 10bp Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 19 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Avg. daily vol: INR 3 bn Ref. source: CP: Reuters page <INCPRATE> Government bond Regulatory: Only SEBI registered FIIs and certain QFIs are allowed access to local currency bond markets. The FII investment cap currently stands at USD 30bn for government bonds, and USD 51 bn for corporate bonds. The utilization of caps can be viewed at https://www.cdslindia.com/publications/FIIs.html Avg. ticket size: INR 100m Bid/ask spread: 0.5 – 1bp Avg. daily vol: INR 100bn. Ref. source: Reuters page <0#INTSY=>, Bloomberg page <DABA7>, Loan Regulatory: Bank-dominated and highly regulated Liquidity: Very poor in the secondary market Spread: Tends to be fixed-rate or individual bank prime-rate based Deposit Regulatory: Liquidity: Except for Non-Resident Indians (NRI), non-residents are not allowed access to the INR onshore deposit market. Good up to 3 years Offshore INR products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn Bid/ask spread: INR 0.03 – 0.05 for 1M – 3M, INR 0.05 – 0.10 Avg. daily vol: USD 1.5 – 2.0bn Ref. source: Reuters page <DBNDF>, <PNDF> Fixing page: Reuters page <RBIB>, spot fixing determined by RBI based on a poll conducted across a number of banks during any 5 minute period between 11:45am-12:15pm Mumbai time, 2 business days before value date Cross fixing: EBS at 12:30pm Mumbai time Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 30mn Bid/ask spread: 0.8 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 150m Ref. source: DB autobahn Fixing page: Reuters page <RBIB>, spot fixing determined by RBI Offshore NDS Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Page 20 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Tenor: Up to 10 years Bid/ask spread: 10-20 bps Avg. daily vol: USD 50mn Ref. source: Reuters page <INDIRS> Fixing page: Reuters page <RBIB>, 12noon Mumbai time, Settlement: T+2, Floating Rate: 6M USD LIBOR, Frequency: Semi-annual, Day-count: Act/365 Clearing and settlement regulation The Clearance Corporation of India Limited is the central counterparty for all transactions in government securities. Trades are settled on a delivery versus payment (DVP) basis, and the CCIL guarantees all trades using the Settlement Guarantee Fund, which is financed out of margins paid by all market participants. Taxation For foreign institutional investors (FIIs), all interest income on G-Secs is currently (up to 31 May 2015) subjected to a withholding tax of 5% (plus applicable surcharge & cess). FIIs are also subjected to 30% (plus applicable surcharge & cess) capital gain tax if the G-Secs are held for less than 36 months, and 10% (plus applicable surcharge & cess) capital gain if they hold them for more than 36 months. However, if the resident country of the FII has completed a tax treaty with India, it may be exempt from some of these taxes, e.g. capital gains tax earned by FIIs in Mauritius or Singapore who have tax treaty with India. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 21 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Indonesia Indonesia adopted a multiple FX structure in the 1970s, with differing rates for general exchange, flexible credit and exports. Under pressure from falling USD reserves, a devaluation and switch to a trade-weighted basket peg was made in 1978. A further devaluation was made in 1983 to boost exports and with it the shift to a heavily managed rate to avoid further large nominal adjustments. During the 1990s, this regime was supplemented by a fixed conversion rate with preannounced intervention bands (initially +/-0.25%) in what amounted to a framework for creeping depreciation. But being too slow to move the market rate up, Bank Indonesia was forced to widen its intervention bands 6 times between January 1994 and September 1996. Then, as the Asian Financial Crisis took hold, a further widening in July 1997 failed to stabilize the currency and IDR was allowed to float freely on August 14. The spot market spiked to 17,000, from a year-ago level of 2,500. After the Asian Crisis – and under the supervision of an IMF program till 2003 – authorities sought to use FX policy -- via higher interest rates, regulations over market access, direct intervention and moral suasion – to dampen market volatility and encourage a stronger rupiah. Today, the BI website notes prominently: “Bank Indonesia has one single overarching objective: to establish and maintain rupiah stability. This objective incorporates two key aspects: the first is a stable rupiah for goods and services, reflected by the inflation rate. The second is exchange rate stability against other foreign currencies, which is reflected by rupiah performance against other foreign currencies.” In the early 2000’s and after the 2008 crisis, a stable to stronger rupiah contributed to lower inflation and reduced external debt servicing costs, while strong capital inflows and a stable current account allowed BI to fully repay IMF debt and build international reserves. However, things began to change in 2011 as the current account deteriorated and capital financing became more erratic. Illiquidity and a sometimes multitiered nature of prices in the FX market have been a concern. Intervention has led to significant drawdown in reserves, prompting BI to sign bilateral swap lines with other central banks. Monetary policy has also become more responsive to the external deficit. The rupiah is convertible on the current account, and although the capital account is more restricted, policies have generally been investor friendly, aimed at increasing FDI and portfolio investment. There has thus been a large build up in offshore debt holdings and is now a significant MNC base in the country. Page 22 USD/IDR exchange rate 16000 14000 12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 90 95 00 05 10 USD/IDR spot rate and 3M NDF premium 14000 Spot Rate 1,400 Forward Points (RHS) 1,200 13000 1,000 12000 800 11000 600 10000 400 9000 200 8000 0 7000 -200 04 06 08 10 12 USD/IDR 3M historical vs. implied volatility % Spread (RHS) 50 % 3M Implied 3M Realized 40 30 20 10 0 -10 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach Bank Indonesia (BI), the central bank (http://www.bi.go.id), implements monetary policy Starting Jan 2014, OJK (http://www.ojk.go.id) the new merger body between Bapepam-LK, the Regulator for Capital Market and Financial Institutions other than banks, and BI will be fully effective. In January 2011, BI prohibited onshore banks from giving IDR and FCY Loans to offshore parties (either via money market or FX swaps). Overdraft facility was also prohibited for offshore accounts. These developments spawned the IDR NDF market in February 2001. BI issued a regulation on 12 January 2001, which was replaced by BI regulation on 14 June 2005 and amended on 08 August 2012, concerning restrictions on IDR transactions and foreign currency credit offered by banks. This prohibits IDR transfer to offshore entities, unless it is for the purpose of investment activities in Indonesia and transaction must be supported by underlying documents. A further BI ruling in mid-2004 requires commercial banks to maintain a maximum net open position (NOP) in foreign exchange at 20% of their equity capital, applicable to both the On-Balance Sheet and Total Balance Sheet of the bank’s NOP. This new regulation was made effective 1 Sep 2004 in an attempt to reduce speculation in the local currency market. Changes to regulations in July 2010 now require banks to adhere to the Total NOP limit every 30 minutes instead of at all times of the day previously, and abolished the On Balance Sheet NOP regulation. Derivatives are permitted for general hedging purposes. The September 2005 regulations on derivatives (later amended in December 2008) outline reporting/disclosure requirements which must be made by banks to their customers. Banks may only engage in derivative transactions related to FX or interest rate or a combination of both. Such derivatives transactions are allowed as long as they are not structured FX products against IDR. Banks are prohibited to provide credit and overdraft facilities for the purpose of derivative transactions. Derivative transactions with foreign entities are allowed for the hedging of their foreign investments in Indonesia with supporting documents and a minimum tenor of 3 months. As of December 2008, netting payment of FX transactions against the IDR is not allowed, i.e. gross settlements are required for FX transactions. Starting November 2008, BI imposed tighter restrictions on the purchase of foreign currency against IDR by onshore participants: Purchases of foreign currency against IDR must not be for speculative purposes. These transactions include, but limited to, structured products which can potentially trigger purchases of foreign currency against IDR for speculative purposes. Underlying documentation is not required for FX transactions not exceeding USD 100,000 in a month. However, clients are required to declare that they will not purchase more than an equivalent USD 100,000 of foreign currency in Indonesia. Underlying documentation is required for foreign currency purchases exceeding USD 100,000 in a month. Clients are required to declare the accuracy of the underlying transaction value and that the amount of foreign currency purchase against IDR will not exceed the nominal amount of the underlying transaction in Indonesia. The declaration or authenticated statement can be in the form of: — A written statement on sufficient stamp duty and signed by the authorized signatory. — A written statement via SWIFT message, Tested Telex, Tested Fax, Reuters Monitoring Dealing System. Regulation on Structured Products issued in July 1, 2009: (i) Banks are required to have Principal Approval from Bank Indonesia for doing Structured Product activities, and to get Effective Statement from Bank Indonesia for each product they would like to offer prior selling of the product. (ii) For structured product with the combination of derivative instrument and derivative instrument, 10% of the notional is required as cash collateral for non-bank clients. (iii) Client's statement of understanding and Structured Product Agreement has to be in Bahasa and signed by both parties Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 23 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Onshore IDR products FX spot Regulatory: Both buying and selling of IDR are permitted. Non-Resident (NR) accounts must not be overdrawn. IDR buying/selling by NR account has to be supported with relevant documents, for example: confirmation of purchase/sale and later proof of purchase/sale for the purchase of shares, credit agreement for the extension/repayment of loans and proof of ownership for the conversion of dividends, and general trade invoices. IDR transfer to an offshore account must be supported by underlying documents. The terms for holding the rupiah prior to use for purchase of the securities is no more than 2 working days. Bid/ask spread: IDR 10-100 Avg. daily vol: USD 0.1 – 0.6 bn USD between domestic interbanks Ref. source: Reuters page <IDR=>, Bloomberg IDR [CRNCY] [GO] Trading hours: 9:30am - 1:00pm, 2:30pm - 5:00pm, Singapore time FX forward/swap Regulatory: For hedging purposes, NRs can sell IDR with supporting documents for underlying investment activities with a minimum tenor of 1 week and a maximum tenor equivalent to the maturity of investment. FX forwards with value date T+3 – T+6 are NOT allowed if the client is selling IDR (and buying FCY), even if the FX trade is for the settlement of securities/equities related trades. However T+3 – T+6 trades are allowed if the client is buying IDR (and selling FCY) for settlement of securities/equities related trades. Avg. ticket size: USD 1 - 5mn Tenor: Overnight to 12 months Bid/ask spread: 5 - 10 IDR for 1month, 10 - 20 IDR for 3 month, 20 - 40 IDR for 6 month, 40 - 70 IDR for 1 year Avg. daily vol: USD 500mn, mostly very short dated below 1 week Ref. Source: Reuters page <IDRF=> FX options Regulatory: Can only do one-leg vanilla option per trade. Any trade combinations (e.g. vertical spread, etc) will be considered as structured product and thus will be subject to Bank Indonesia’s Regulation on Structured Product issued in July 1, 2009. Either way, documents must be provided if related to foreign currency purchase. For NRs, additional regulations also applied as per the FX forward market. Avg. ticket size: USD 1 - 5mn Bid/ask spread: 5 vols Tenor: 1 month - 1 year Avg. daily vol: Very irregular, recently close to zero. Onshore CCS Regulatory: As per FX forward market Avg. ticket size: USD 1 - 5mn Tenor: 1 - 5 years Bid/ask spread: 40 - 100bp Avg. daily vol: Unable to estimate as highly irregular Ref. source: Reuters <EXCOJL>, <INJA01> Page 24 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies IRS Regulatory: For NR, IRS transactions must be supported by underlying economic activities. Liquidity: IDR 100bn Avg. ticket size: IDR 20bn – 50bn Tenor: 1 - 5 years Bid/ask spread: 50-100bp Avg. daily vol: Unable to estimate as highly irregular Ref. source: Reuters <EXCOJO>, <INJAJB> Fixing page: Reuters page <JIBOR> Short-term money market instruments (cash market, repo) Regulatory: Onshore banks can lend excess IDR to BI through an overnight window called Depo Facility (DF) at a fixed predetermined rate (currently 175 bps below BI rate). BI also carries out open market operation with the following instruments: Term Deposit / Reverse Repo or Repo in the cash market as and when they deem fit. The underlying instrument for Reverse Repo and Repo is the Indonesian Government Bonds or T-Bills. O/N repo is also available to onshore banks only for purposes of BI acting as the lender of last resort (currently 100bps above BI rate). Avg. ticket size: IDR 50 - 100bn Avg. daily vol: IDR 5 – 10tn Ref. source: Reuters <INJAMM> Government bond Regulatory: BI regulates the Certificates of Deposit (SBI) market while BAPEPAM supervises transactions in other securities which include Indonesia's government and recap bonds. Foreigners are allowed to access the onshore government bond market. In June 2010, BI imposed a Minimum Holding Period (MHP) of 28 calendar days for SBIs before they can be sold in the secondary market, and later revised this MHP into 6 months in January 2011. The MHP was revised back to one month w.e.f. September 2013. Avg. ticket size: IDR 10 - 50bn Bid/ask spread: 25 - 50bp Avg. daily vol: IDR 3tn (includes both cash and repos) Ref. source: Bloomberg INDORB <GOVT> (RECAP BONDS), INDOGB<GOVT> (GOV'T BONDS), Bloomberg page <DABA8>, Bloomberg INDOTB<GOVT> (SBI), Bloomberg IDMA Loan Regulatory: Deposit Regulatory: Liquidity: IDR and FCY Loans to foreign counterparties are not permitted COB (Commercial Offshore Borrowing) limit whereby onshore bank borrows from offshore residents has been reactivated since January 2011. Bank must keep the COB limit below 30% of its capital. Good Offshore IDR products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Bid/ask spread: IDR 20-40 for 1 month tenor, IDR 40-60 for 6 months tenor and IDR 50-70 for 1 year tenor Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 25 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Avg. daily vol: USD 200mn Ref. source: Reuters page <DBNDG>, <PNDG> Fixing page. Reuters page <ABSIRFIX01>, spot fixing determined from average traded value of 1 month NDF outright rate minus average 1 month against the fix swap points between selected brokers between 07:30-11:00 am Singapore time, 2 business days before value date Cross fixing: EBS at time of fix Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: 2.5 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 20mn Ref. source: DB autobahn Fixing page: Reuters page <ABSIRFIX01>, spot fixing determined from average traded value of 1 month NDF outright rate minus average 1 month against the fix swap points between selected brokers between 07:30-11:00 am Singapore time, 2 business days before value date Offshore NDS Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Tenor: Up to 10 years Bid/ask spread: 10-20bps Avg. daily vol: USD 50mn Ref. source: Reuters page <INDIRS> Fixing page: Reuters page <ABSFIX01>, 11:00am Singapore time, Settlement: T+2, Floating Rate: 6M USD LIBOR, Frequency: Semi-annual, Day-count: Act/365 Clearing and settlement regulation A local custodian is required for transacting onshore government securities. According to the regulations, settlement of all government bonds has to be done through the Scripless Securities Settlement System (BI-SSSS) and is settled T+2 locally and T+3 for foreigners. PT Kustodian Sentral Efek Indonesia (KSEI) conducts the clearing and settlement of corporate bonds through the Fixed Income Trading System. Settlement in the derivatives market is on a cash basis and settled on a T+2 or T+3 basis. The Indonesian Clearing and Guarantee Corporation (KPEI) acts as the counterparty for settling and liquidating an open position upon contract maturity. Taxation The general rate of withholding tax (WHT) is 20% of the gross interest earned by the foreign investor. This WHT rate may be reduced by applicable double tax treaty. There is also a 20% capital gain tax. Some double tax treaties do, however, provide an exemption from capital gain tax on disposal by non-residents of Indonesian government securities. Page 26 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Malaysia The ringgit, which was formally launched in 1967 as the Malaysian dollar, replaced the 3 year old sterlinglinked regional Malaysian/Straits dollars. Like its predecessors, it was initially pegged to GBP, but this was replaced with a controlled float against a tradeweighted basket in 1973 with the US dollar adopted as the country’s intervention currency. This regime was tweaked in 1975 by the inclusion of currencies of trade settlement in the basket’s weighting criteria, but it was essentially the same framework that remained in place up until the Asian Crisis. On July 14 1997, the ringgit was allowed to float. After falling by about 60%, the government on September 2, 1998, announced extensive capital controls and the country’s reversion to a fixed exchange rate, MYR being pegged at 3.80 to the USD. Seven years later, Bank Negara announced the end of Malaysia’s peg to the US dollar within 30 minutes of China’s de-pegging announcement on July 21, 2005. Governor Zeti said that they were reverting to a managed float, with the aim of maintaining the value of the ringgit against a trade-weighted index of major trading partners. USD/MYR exchange rate 4.4 4.0 3.6 3.2 2.8 2.4 2.0 90 95 00 05 10 USD/MYR spot rate and 3M fwd premium 3.8 Spot Rate 500 Forward Points (RHS) 3.7 400 3.6 300 3.5 The Bank Negara Malaysia has the dual responsibility of conducting monetary policy and fostering financial stability. The main policy instrument is the Overnight Policy Rate (OPR). In general, authorities have indicated comfort with a gradual strengthening of the ringgit, and stated that the spot market should largely follow the trend in regional currencies. Nevertheless, central bank intervention can be characterized as more asymmetric in recent years – with BNM tending to resist currency gains more actively, but more accommodating of currency weakness. Reserves cover is however among the highest amongst EM economies, and thus BNM is in a better position to defend should it choose. Most capital account restrictions have been dismantled, in recent years, particularly in the area of outward investment flows and fund raising activity, with the remaining restrictions largely macro prudential in nature. Documentation requirements for cross-border flows have also been relaxed significantly. The government’s recent initiatives envisage boosting inward FDI and revitalizing domestic financial and capital markets. In the last few years, BNM has announced several liberalization measures, including scrapping of caps on inter-company loans, caps on FX hedging by residents, rules governing issuance of securities onshore and offshore, and importantly, freeing up its currency for trading offshore for trade settlement. For instance, the MYR is now traded in the inter-bank market (CFETS) in China directly versus RMB. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 200 3.4 100 3.3 0 3.2 -100 3.1 3.0 -200 2.9 -300 2.8 -400 06 08 10 12 USD/MYR 3M historical vs. implied volatility % % 15 Spread 3M Implied 3M Realized 12 9 6 3 0 -3 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Page 27 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The central bank, Bank Negara Malaysia (“BNM”), is the primary regulator of the financial sector (http://www.bnm.gov.my). BNM, through the Office of the Controller of Foreign Exchange, also sets and manages FX policy. The Labuan Financial Services Authority (“LFSA”) regulates the Labuan International Business Financial Centre (Labuan “IBFC”: http://www.lfsa.gov.my/). The Securities Commission (“SC”) regulates the issuance and offering of securities (http://www.sc.com.my). Residents can hedge committed or anticipatory current account transactions, committed financial account transactions (except for foreign currency deposits), and foreign currency exposures of permitted investment in foreign currency assets (e.g. equity hedges), other than foreign currency deposits. In effort to promote Malaysia as an International Islamic Financial Centre, BNM has with effect 28 October 2008 allowed all International Islamic Banks (“IIB”) (Licensed under the Islamic Banking Act 1983) to buy/sell foreign currency against another foreign currency and to borrow/lend in foreign currency with residents and non-residents for any purpose. A company with Multimedia Super Corridor (“MSC”) status is exempted from foreign exchange administration requirements for transactions undertaken for its own account. BNM has been gradually relaxing foreign exchange control rules that it has put in place since the Asian Financial Crisis. Changes to foreign exchange regulation are updated on http://www.bnm.gov.my/microsites/fxadmin/index.htm Earlier this year, BNM announced that domestic banks have to use the reference rate produced by the Association Cambiste Internationale (“ACI”), the country’s domestic foreign exchange association, for Ringgit foreign exchange contracts. Onshore MYR products FX spot Regulatory: Offshore spot trading of MYR is allowed for settlement of goods or services with resident and settlement of ringgit assets with resident or non-resident only , where a non-resident is allowed to receive or make payment in ringgit through its External Account with an appointed overseas branch the banking group of a licensed onshore bank. Since August 2010, trading of MYR against the CNY is allowed on the CFETS platform in China. Avg. ticket size: USD 5m Bid/Ask Spread: 20 pips Avg. daily vol: USD 3.0-3.5bn Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBAX>, DB Bloomberg page <DBKL3>, Reuters page <MYR=> Trading hours: 8:00am to 5.00pm, Singapore time FX forward / swap/ long-dated FX forward Regulatory: Non-residents are allowed to enter into hedging arrangements with licensed onshore banks for any inflow or outflow of funds for firm committed transactions. Offshore forward trading of MYR is allowed for settlement of goods or services with residents and settlement of ringgit assets with resident or non-residents only, where a non-resident is allowed to receive or make payment in ringgit through its External Account with an appointed overseas branch of the banking group a licensed onshore bank. Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn for below 1week, USD10m for term swaps Tenor: Up to 12 months Bid/ask spread: 10-40 pips Page 28 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Avg. daily vol: USD 1.5bn, approximately 80% of which is for below 1 week tenors Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBAX>, DB Bloomberg page <DBKL3>, Reuters page <MYRF=>, <DBAX=> FX options Regulatory: As per FX forward market Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: 2 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 20mn Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBAX>, DB Bloomberg page <DBKL4>, Reuters page <DBAX> Fixing page: No fixing page for onshore Onshore CCS Regulatory: As per FX forward market Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Tenor: 1 – 10 years Bid/ask spread: 10 – 20bps Avg. daily vol: USD 20mn Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DEUM>, DB Bloomberg page < DBKL1 > IRS / FRA Regulatory: As per FX forward market Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: MYR 20 – 50mn Bid/ask spread: 5bp for 1 – 3Y, 10bp 4 – 5Y, 15bp for > 5Y Avg. daily vol: USD 100mn Ref. source: Reuters page <DBGR>, DB Bloomberg page < DBKL2> Fixing page: Reuters page <KLIBOR>, 11.00am Singapore time Short-term money market instruments (BA/CP/repo) Regulatory: Clients – Repos/Placements: Overnight and above Liquidity: BNM is the key participant in the repo market. BNM uses the repo as a money market tool to manage liquidity. Avg. ticket size: CP: MYR 5mn; BA: MYR 0.5mn; Repo: MYR 50mn Bid/ask spread: 2 – 5bp Avg. daily vol: USD 200mn Government bond Regulatory: With effect from 11 September 2004, the non-residents are exempted from the 15% withholding tax in respect of interest income earned from investment in ringgit and foreign currency-denominated bonds (other than convertible loan stock) approved by the Securities Commission. Foreign investors must transact through a local custodian. Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: MYR 10mn Bid/ask spread: 2 – 5bp Avg. daily vol: MYR 1bn Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 29 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Ref. source: Loan Regulatory: Reuters page <DBGR>, Bloomberg page <DABA11> For cross-border inter-company lending, with effect from May 2008, a resident company is free to obtain any amount in foreign currency from non-residentnon-bank parent companies (previously up to an equivalent of MYR 100 million); and with effect 18 August 2010 resident company is allowed to borrow any amount in foreign currency from a non-resident non-bank related company. Resident company borrowing from non-resident banking institutions is however still subject to ceiling of MYR 100 million equivalent in aggregate per corporate group to finance any purposes, including trade financing (trade financing capped at MYR 5 million equivalent in aggregate. With effect May 2008, a resident company is allowed to borrow in MYR, including through the issuance of ringgit-denominated redeemable preference shares or loan stocks of any amount from its non-resident non-bank parent company to finance activities in the real sector in Malaysia; and up to MYR 1 million in aggregate from other non-resident non-bank companies or individuals for use in Malaysia MYR credit facilities from non-resident banking institutions are still not permissible. A resident company or individual is free to lend in MYR of any amount to non-resident non-bank companies or individuals to finance activities in the real sector in Malaysia or refinance the purchase or construction of residential and commercial property in Malaysia (except for purchase of land only).. A licensed onshore bank is free to lend in MYR of any amount to non-resident non-bank companies or individuals to finance activities in the real sector in Malaysia and with effect 18 August 2010 the purpose is extended to refinance the purchase of residential and commercial property in Malaysia (except for the purchase of land only), to finance margin financing for securities traded on Bursa Malaysia and to finance settlement of goods and services in ringgit with residents (trade financing facilities) Liquidity: Good Spread: USD loans are LIBOR based. MYR loans are priced based on respective banks’ cost of funds. Deposit Regulatory: Liquidity: Non-Resident External Accounts (“EA)” with licensed onshore financial institutions are permitted. There is no overnight limit on External Accounts and a Non-Resident may make MYR cash withdrawals of any amount, with the use and sources of funds subject to the limitations prescribed by the Central Bank. MYR funds in External Accounts may be converted into foreign currency and repatriated or used in Malaysia for permitted purposes. With effect from March 2005, fixed deposits placed by non-SME corporations and Non-Residents, regardless of the amount, are no longer subject to the floor rates set by the Central Bank and will be on a fully-negotiated basis. Good Offshore MYR products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: Restricted to offshore only Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/Ask Spread: 1M: MYR 0.003, 3M: MYR 0.0035, 6M-1Y: 0.005. Avg. daily vol: USD 1bn Ref. source: Reuters page <DBNG> Page 30 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Fixing page: Reuters page <MYRFIX2>, spot fixing determined from contributions by onshore primary dealer banks, 11:00 am Singapore time, 2 business days before value date Cross fixing: EBS at time of fix Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Regulatory: Potential restrictions for onshore entities. Offshore entities have no restrictions. ISDA documentation applies.. Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn Bid/ask spread: 0.8 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 100mn Ref. source: DB autobahn Fixing page: Reuters page <MYRFIX2>, spot fixing determined from contributions by onshore marketmaking banks, 11:00 am Singapore time (published 11:10 am), 2 business days before value date Offshore NDS Regulatory: Restricted to offshore only Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Tenor: Up to 5 years Bid/ask spread: 20 – 30bps Avg. daily vol: USD 10-25 mn Ref. source: Reuters page <TRADMYR> Fixing page: Reuters page <MYRFIX2>, 11:00am Kuala Lumpur time, Settlement: T+2, Floating Rate: 6M USD LIBOR, Frequency: Semi-annual, Day-count: Act/365 Clearing and settlement regulation Foreign investors can settle Malaysia government securities either through Euroclear or Clearstream. Given these securities have to be settled onshore, foreign investors must open a securities account with an appointed Primary Dealer. In terms of clearing and settlement, all contracts executed under Malaysia’s two exchanges (securities and derivatives) have to be done via the Fixed Delivery and Settlement System. Taxation There is no withholding tax on interest income derived from investments by non-residents in all ringgit-denominated bonds and Islamic securities. In addition, there is also no capital gains tax or any stamp duty related to issuance or transfer of Malaysian government or private debt securities. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 31 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Pakistan From independence in 1947 through 1970, the Pakistani Rupee (PKR) operated on a Sterling peg. In 1971, with the increasing economic dominance of the USA, Pakistan pegged the Rupee to the USD. In Jan 1982, to reduce the negative effects of an appreciating USD on its export competitiveness, Pakistan devalued and adopted a managed floating exchange rate system. Under this system, the rupee’s value was determined on a daily basis, with reference to a currency basket of Pakistan’s major trading partners and competitors. In 1998, the country’s mounting isolation in the wake of nuclear tests resulted in downward pressure on reserves, prompting a rethink of FX policy. The authorities opted for a multiple exchange rate system, which comprised of an official rate (pegged to 46 rupees per USD), a Floating Interbank Rate (FIBR), and a composite rate (combination of the two). Under this system, a certain percentage of FX requirements were available at the official rate; the rest was fulfilled by the interbank market at the market rate. The exchange rate system was unified in 1999, with the introduction of a market based floating exchange rate system. However, an unofficial band of 52.10-52.30 Rupees per USD was maintained by State Bank of Pakistan. As part of a stabilization program, the band was dismantled in July 2000. Thereafter, the PKR depreciated 23% to 64 in Sept 2001, before stabilizing around 60. In 2008, the PKR depreciated by nearly 30%, as high oil prices, strong domestic demand and relatively loose fiscal and monetary policies led to a sharp widening of the trade deficit. FX reserves were depleted rapidly, and eventually a USD 7.6bn loan was sought and secured from the IMF with the aim of restoring confidence in the currency. While the PKR stabilized for a few years, pressure resumed in late 2011 due to a deteriorating BoP position, with inward FDI grinding to a near halt. With reserves falling under 2 months of import cover by 2013, a fresh IMF program was negotiated in September, which offered Pakistan USD6.6bn under a 3 year Extended Fund Facility. In addition to helping the country meet external financial obligations, it is intended to guide extensive economic reforms such as fiscal consolidation and fostering growth. Monetary policy has been reoriented towards rebuilding reserves. USD/PKR exchange rate 120 110 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 90 95 00 05 10 3M KIBR vs. USD LIBOR 16 4.0 KIBOR 3M US LIBOR 3M (RHS) 14 3.5 12 3.0 10 2.5 8 2.0 6 1.5 4 1.0 2 0.5 0 1-Jun-09 0.0 1-Jun-10 1-Jun-11 1-Jun-12 1-Jun-13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg The rupee is convertible for current account transactions, though exporters are required to convert their foreign currency into rupees within three days, and importers are required to present documents showing proof of underlying transaction. Furthermore, importers’ forward hedging is subject to restriction, though exporters can sell USD forward. The capital account is also highly restricted. Page 32 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) is the Central Bank and main regulator. The SBP is independent of the Ministry of Finance (MOF) and is primarily responsible for the formulation and implementation of monetary policy. It enforces foreign exchange laws and monitors market activity. Regulations can be viewed at (http://www.sbp.opg.pk). Onshore PKR products FX spot Regulatory: Supporting documents should be submitted to an authorized dealer (commercial bank) prior to trading. Avg. ticket size: USD 2mn Bid/ask spread: 0.05 - 0.10bp Avg. daily vol: USD 150 – 200mn Ref. source: Reuters page <PKR=> Trading hours: 9:00am – 4:30pm for Mondays – Friday. FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: Supporting documentation is required as per spot. Hedging is permitted for underlying transactions with onshore banks. Forward cover facility is available to importers against the letter of credit only, but it shall not be provided for a period of less than one month (http://www.sbp.org.pk/epd/2011/FEC2.htm) Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Tenor: Overnight to one year, but liquidity beyond 6 months is poor Bid/ask spread: 0.005bp for 1 day tenor, 0.03bp for 1 – 3 months tenors, 0.05bp for 6 months tenor Avg. daily vol: USD 200 – 250mn Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBPK>, Reuters page <SBPK02 and SBPK04> FX options, FRA/IRS The derivatives market is still in its infancy. The State Bank of Pakistan issues licences to banks to trade these derivative products. These are called Authorized Derivatives Dealers (ADD). ADDs can trade G10 FX options, PKR FRA (up to 2 year) and PKR IRS (up to 5 years). Specific approvals are required for any other transaction. Non ADD banks require approval for all transactions. Short-term money market instruments (repo) Regulatory: Non-residents can access the onshore market by bringing in foreign currency and converting it into local currency for the purpose of investing in securities or for repo transactions. However a 30% withholding tax applies on fixed income instruments. Avg. ticket size: PKR 500mn Bid/ask spread: 25 bps Avg. daily vol: PKR 35 - 40bn Ref. source: DB Reuters page <DBPK>, Reuters page <PKRV> Government bond Regulatory: As per repo transactions Avg. ticket size: PKR 50mn Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 33 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Bid/ask spread: 5 bp Avg. daily vol: PKR 500mn Ref. source: Reuters page <PKRV> Bloomberg <EBPK> Loan Regulatory: Banks can freely lend funds to each other so as to maintain liquidity requirements. Customer loans are limited to 20% of capital. Effective from December 31, 2013, customer loans will be limited to 25% of capital. Liquidity: Fair Spread: Depends on liquidity; prices are quoted at 0.50% - 1.00% for tenors up to 3 years. Deposit Regulatory: Liquidity: Non residents can remit foreign currency and exchange it for PKR, which may be deposited with an onshore bank. Fair Clearing and settlement regulation A Subsidiary General Ledger Account (SGLA) is required by all bank and nonbank financial institutions, held with the SBP for government and bank customer owned securities. Custody is managed through the SGLA. Taxation The withholding tax rate is 10% of gross interest paid to Pakistan residents and to non-residents without a Permanent Establishment (PE) in Pakistan. The withholding tax rate is 20% for non-residents with a PE in Pakistan. However, this can be reduced if there are appropriate double-taxation treaties (e.g.: Under Pakistan-Germany Treaty rate of tax on interest is 10% if recipient is a bank recognized as a banking institution) .Gains on Government Securities might be subject to tax in Pakistan as per the Corporate Tax rate ( currently 35%). However, this can be mitigated if there are appropriate double taxation treaties with country of non-resident investor and Pakistan. Page 34 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Philippines Having been fixed at a rate of 2 peso per USD from 1903 through the end of World War 2, the peso was floated at the time of the country’s Independence in 1946. It fell steadily under balance of payments pressure until President Marcos declared martial law in 1972 implementing an export-led industrialization strategy. This called for a multiple FX rate structure based on a daily “guided rate,” with different prices applying to transactions for exports, imports and external debt. That regime began to crumble after the financial crisis of 1983, and over the next year the country gradually moved to a single, “floating” rate regime. When Marcos was driven out of power in 1986, one USD bought about 19 pesos. The FX market continued to be guided by official intervention aimed at steadying its downtrend through the mid-1990s until the Asian Crisis hit. USD/PHP traded up from a preCrisis level of around 26 to stabilize in the 40-45 range. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) conducts monetary and exchange rate policy with controlling inflation as its main objective. The BSP describes itself as an inflation targeting central bank, and has adopted a fixed medium-term inflation target of 3-5% for 201214 and 2-4% for 2015-16. Philippines benefits from a strong balance of payment position. Current account surpluses are driven by remittances from Overseas Contract Workers (OCW). These display a pronounced seasonal pattern, with largest inflows in December and April. The current account has found added support from the Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) sector’s revenues. Credit rerating and high growth have boosted portfolio inflows. USD/PHP exchange rate 60 50 40 30 20 90 95 00 05 10 USD/PHP spot rate and 3M fwd premium 60 Spot Rate 500 Forward Points (RHS) 400 55 300 50 200 45 100 40 0 35 -100 00 02 04 06 08 10 12 USD/PHP 3M historical vs. implied volatility The Philippines was a highly dollarized economy less than a decade ago and thus the exchange rate is a key barometer through which the public perceives macroeconomic stability. It also has implications for domestic consumption given the importance of OCW workers’ repatriated income. Intervention to limit excessive appreciation led to a significant build up in reserves between 2009-12. High sterilization costs also forced an increased emphasis on macro prudential measures to control FX strength. BSP has liberalized in the FX regime with a focus on easing resident and corporate access to foreign currency and increasing outward investment flows. To limit hot money inflows, non-residents have been barred from accessing onshore SDA accounts, whose rates have also been cut sharply. Domestic speculative activity has been targeted by reducing onshore bank activity in the NDF market, raising capital charges on NDFs and restricting NDF exposure to a proportion of bank capital. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. % 30 Spread (RHS) 27 3M Realized % 3M Implied 24 21 18 15 12 9 6 3 0 -3 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Page 35 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has supervisory authority over all banking activities, including FX and interest rate trading (http://www.bsp.gov.ph). While PHP is not freely convertible, foreign currency (FCY) may be freely bought and sold against PHP outside the banking system. Hence, there is no prohibition against exporters selling USD directly to importers or private investors. FX regulations focus primarily on bank transactions, with rules and restrictions specifically addressing the nature of the transaction and the counterparties. An onshore bank with a derivatives license may deal in FX swaps and FX forwards, as well as other types of derivatives, for their own account or on behalf of customers, provided that the specific type of derivative traded is covered by their license. In addition, the role the bank plays in the transaction (i.e. as dealer, as broker, as end-user, etc.) must be provided for in the same license. A bank that does not have a derivatives license can deal in currency swaps and forwards with tenors of three years and less, subject to pre-qualification requirements and provided that the derivatives are recognized by the BSP as an organized market. A bank which is entering into derivatives transactions purely as an end user, need not apply for a license with the BSP for such activities but is still subject to pre-qualification requirements. The purchase of foreign exchange by residents for outward investments is allowed up to a maximum of USD 60m without prior BSP approval. Proof of investment outside of the Philippines must be presented to an Authorized Agent Banks (AAB). Foreign exchange received by residents as dividends/earnings or divestment proceeds from outward investments and investment in bonds/notes issued by residents offshore that were funded with foreign exchange purchased from AABs need not be inwardly remitted and sold for pesos. ( http://www.bsp.gov.ph/regulations/regulations.asp?type=1&id=3112) Investors who bring in foreign currencies and convert them into local currency via the banking system may have their investment registered, provided that they show proof of FX conversion (via a Certificate of Inward Remittance or CIR) as well as proof that the Pesos were used to fund an eligible investment (typically, listed equities, local currency bonds or Peso deposits). The registration is evidenced by a Bangko Sentral Registration Document (BSRD) and this document is important if the investor intends to reconvert the local currency into foreign currencies in the future. Without the registration, such a transaction/repatriation cannot be serviced by AABs. For investments in Peso deposits, a minimum tenor of 3 months is required before registration can take place. For investments in listed equities or Peso-denominated bonds, there is no minimum holding period although sufficient processing time must be given before the BSRD can be issued. (http://www.bsp.gov.ph/downloads/Regulations/attachments/2013/c794_1.pdf) Onshore PHP products FX spot Regulatory: Onshore banks may buy FCY/PHP from both onshore and offshore counter-parties without prior BSP approval or documentation. The limit on outward investments by Residents is USD 60mn per investor per year. (http://www.bsp.gov.ph/regulations/regulations.asp?type=1&id=3112) Onshore banks may sell FCY/PHP to onshore or offshore counterparties provided there is an underlying business rationale supported by documentation. For onshore customers, typical justification would include trade, payment of foreign currency loans and repatriation of dividends. Offshore counter-parties must submit a Bangko Sentral Registration Document (BSRD), which proves that the foreign investor had sold FCY/PHP and had thereafter invested the PHP funds in an appropriate asset/investment. This BSRD is normally kept by the investor’s custodian bank. Manual of Regulations for Foreign Exchange Transactions (MORFXT) cover the specific documentation requirements for each type of trade/non-trade transaction. In all instances, bank KYC (Know Your Customer) and BSP anti-money laundering guidelines apply. Avg. ticket size: USD 2mn Bid/ask spread: PHP 0.02 Avg. daily vol: USD 800 mio Page 36 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Ref. source: Reuters page <PDSPESO> Trading hours: 9:00am – 12:00pm, 2:00pm – 4:00pm FX forward/FX swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: For deliverable outright FCY/PHP forwards, spot trading rules apply. For forwards, Authorized Agent Banks (AABs) may only enter into derivative contracts with their customers for hedging eligible actual FX obligations or existing FX exposures. The minimum documentary requirements shall be presented on or before the deal date. No double hedging covering the same underlying FX obligation/exposure is allowed. In case of prepayments of foreign currency loans covered by swaps, banks shall ensure that such prepayments are allowed under the covering loan agreement. Also, for swaps, the rules vary depending on the type of counterparty and the side of the trade. An onshore bank can only sell/buy FCY/PHP if the spot leg is supported by the same documents required of outright spot trades. If the onshore bank is doing a buy/sell FCY/PHP swap, the forward leg is subject to documentary requirements if the underlying is a FCY loan or FCY investment related. Avg. ticket size: USD 5 - 10mn Tenor: Overnight to 1 year Bid/ask spread: PHP 0.01 for 1 week – 1 month tenors, PHP 0.03 for 2 – 3 months tenors, PHP 0.10 for 6 months tenor, PHP 0.20 for 1 year tenor Avg. daily vol: USD 500mn Ref. source: Reuters page <PHSWAPS>, <PHSWAPT>, <PHSWAPU> Fixing page: Reuters page <PHIREF>, FX options Regulatory: As per FX forwards. Avg. ticket size: USD 1mn Tenor: 1 week to 1 year Bid/ask spread: 1.5 vols Avg. daily vol: Unable to estimate as highly irregular Ref. source: Reuters page <PHVOL> Onshore CCS Regulatory: In general, the rules for USDPHP CCS follow the same rules as USDPHP FX Forwards and FX swaps. However, unlike FX forwards, no formal interbank market for CCS exists. Access by non-residents to the onshore USD/PHP CCS market is highly restricted. Depending on the side, the non-resident client may be required to either: (a) obtain prior BSP approval or (b) provide the same supporting documents and underlying business reason that would be needed for an outright purchase of FCY versus PHP. In addition, proof that the customer is transacting for legitimate hedging purposes is necessary. Avg. ticket size: USD 15-20mn (indicative only as no interbank market exists) Bid/ask spread: 50 – 120bp (indicative only as no interbank market exists) Avg. daily vol: Unable to estimate as highly irregular and there is no actively quoted interbank market IRS market Regulatory: As per onshore CCS market Avg. ticket size: PHP 50 – 100mn Tenor: 1 – 5 years Bid/ask spread: 25bp Avg. daily vol: PHP 300mn Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 37 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Ref. source: Reuters page <PHIRS>, Bloomberg broker page <ICPH1> Fixing page: Floating leg fixes against the 3mth FX forward implied, as seen on Reuters page <PHIREF>, 11:30am Manila time Short-term money market instruments Regulatory: Non-Residents are not allowed to access the onshore market. Liquidity: Good for overnight, poor for term Avg. ticket size: PHP 200mn for overnight, PHP 100mn for term Bid/ask spread: 12.5 – 25bp Avg. daily vol: Irregular Ref. source: Bloomberg page PPCALL <Index>, PICRV<Index> Government bond Regulatory: Shorting PHP securities is prohibited. No facility yet exists for genuine securities borrowing or lending. Coupon income and trading gains on government securities are subject to 20% WHT. Taxation on coupon income is subject to tax treaty, but the process for tax refunds is tedious. Non-residents can freely buy PHP securities. Non-residents can buy back the foreign currency from the local banking system as long as the FX inward remittance and PHP investment have been registered with the BSP and duly covered in BSRD documents. Avg. ticket size: PHP 100mn Bid/ask spread: 5 – 25bp Avg. daily vol: PHP 10bn Ref. source: Bloomberg page < PDEX1>, Bloomberg broker page < ICPH3, AMSP4, PYPH6 > Loan Regulatory: Non-Residents are not allowed to borrow PHP from onshore banks. A general rule for FX service of foreign currency loans is that the loan must have been registered with the BSP. Unregistered inter-company loans may be eligible for hedging, however, via swaps. Liquidity: No loan trading market. Good for corporate loan market on both USD and PHP Spread: USD loans are usually LIBOR- and SIBOR-based. PHP loans are usually priced off the 3month T-bill rate, the FX forward implied, or the BSP reverse repo rate though there is no mandated benchmark and this is usually a bilateral decision between the bank and the borrowing client. Deposit Regulatory: Liquidity: Non-residents may not maintain PHP deposits onshore unless the deposit is funded by an inward remittance of foreign exchange (converted through an onshore bank). PHP deposits of Non-Residents should have an initial minimum tenor of 90 days in order to qualify for registration and BSRD issuance. Most funds from onshore corporates range from overnight to 1 month. Yields are subject to 20% WHT and annualized DST. PHP deposits are subject to reserves (currently 18%) and are only insured up to PHP 500,000 by PDIC. Fair for tenors from overnight up to 1 year Offshore PHP products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. NDF transactions with onshore counterparties are subject to certain regulations. All NDF contracts with residents shall be settled in pesos. Fixing: Page 38 The PHP fix is the weighted average spot rate of trades in the onshore spot market done from 9:00am until 11:30am Manila time, one day before settlement date. The fixing rate is announced at 11.30am (Manila time). Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: 0.04 – 0.06 for 1 – 3 months tenors, 0.08 – 0.10 for 6 months – 1 year tenor Avg. daily vol: USD 600mn Ref. source: Reuters page <DBNDF>, <PNDF> Fixing page: Reuters page <PHPESO> Cross fixing: EBS at time of fix Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 10 – 15mn Bid/ask spread: 1.0 vol Avg. daily vol: USD 20mn Ref. source: DB autobahn Fixing page: Reuters page <PDSPESO>, spot fixing based on an weighted-average rate during morning trading hours (9:00 – 11:30am), 11:30am Manila time, 1 business day Offshore NDS Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Tenor: Up to 10 years Bid/ask spread: 20-30 bps Avg. daily vol: USD 25-50mn Ref. source: Reuters page <INDIRS> Fixing page: Reuters page <PDSPESO>, 11:30am Manila time, Settlement: T+1, Floating Rate: 6M USD LIBOR, Frequency: Semi-annual, Day-count: Act/365 Clearing and settlement regulation Transactions are cleared through the Registry of Scripless Securities (RoSS), administered by the Bureau of the Treasury. The standard settlement for government securities is T+1. Although deviation from the standard settlement time is possible, both parties have to agree upon it. With regards to settlement of transactions, foreign investors can settle Philippine bonds onshore as well as offshore. For onshore settlement, a domestic custodian must be appointed. For offshore settlement, fixed rated treasury bonds are Euroclearable (since June 2012), and can be delivered against $ (or other deliverable currencies). Taxation There are no restrictions on foreign participation in the local bond market, but to be entitled to capital repatriation and interest remittance, all foreign investments need to be registered with the BSP through the Central Bank Document Registration (CBDR) system. For domestic investors, interest income in the Philippines is subject to a withholding tax of 20%. For foreign investors, taxes on interest are officially set at 30%, but this is often reduced to 10-20% depending on tax treaties (e.g. 15% under the RP-Singapore Tax Treaty). Net capital gains on bond trading are subjected to 30% income tax. However, gains from the sale of bonds with a maturity of more than five years are excluded from gross income and consequently exempt from income tax. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 39 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Singapore The Singapore dollar was launched in 1967 and initially pegged to GBP, then USD. As a highly trade-driven economy, authorities’ focus shifted in the 1970s to managing FX policy against a basket of Singapore’s trading partners. The current, nominal effective basket framework dates back to 1981. SGD NEER forms the primary instrument of monetary policy, since conventional interest rate or money supply targeting is deemed to be less effective in a small open economy. USD/SGD exchange rate 2.0 1.8 1.6 1.4 Dealing with inflation through the exchange rate, functions primarily by dampening tradeable goods prices, and reducing imported inflation. For much of the past two decades, this policy led to an enviable inflation and growth record. In the post-2008 years, inflation became more a function of non-tradable price increases such as accommodation, transportation and labour costs. However, authorities have repeatedly stressed commitment to the current FX-based monetary policy framework over interest rate targeting. They have instead been supplementing policy with macroprudential measures, i.e. in the property market. SGD policy formation has become more transparent since the Asian Financial Crisis. The MAS relies on econometric modelling of the economy under various exchange rate scenarios, with critical input variables including foreign growth, inflation, and commodity prices. The direction of FX policy is announced in a semi-annual review statement (currently, April and October) and, in extreme circumstances (e.g., post9/11), via intra-meeting statements. The MAS allows the trade-weighted SGD NEER to fluctuate within a policy band, with an undisclosed slope (an appreciation/neutral bias), band width, and midpoint. These variables can be changed at each policy review. The Authority intervenes in USD/SGD to keep the SGD NEER within its predetermined range. In so far as the policy framework is credible, even token purchases or sales of USD create a strong signalling effect. Even though the MAS does not disclose the composition of its basket, its target bands or the exact magnitude of any tightening or easing bias, it has begun to provide more information on the SGD NEER series. In April 2006, at every policy review the Authority began releasing an underlying raw data series of weekly NEER levels going back to 1999. This improved transparency for market participants and led to the creation of basket proxies on the street which can be actively monitored. MAS SGD NEER values are now released monthly, enabling greater cross-checking of street models. The Singapore dollar is fully convertible and deliverable. Page 40 1.2 1.0 90 95 00 05 10 DB SGD NEER and estimated policy bands 125 1 Jan 1999=100 SGD NEER: historical, forward and bands 3% slope 121 117 1% slope 2% slope 2% slope Neutral 113 109 bandwidth: +/-2% ard mid-pt bandwidth: +/-3% ard mid-pt 105 A-09 O-09 A-10 O-10 A-11 O-11 A-12 O-12 A-13 O-13 A-14 USD/SGD 3M historical vs. implied volatility % Spread (RHS) 15 % 3M Implied 10 3M Realized 12 8 9 6 6 4 3 2 0 0 -3 -2 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach Monetary policy is set by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) (http://www.mas.gov.sg). Regulation and supervision of the financial sector is also conducted by MAS. The use of derivatives for legitimate commercial reasons is permitted. Regulations on SGD products require an understanding of the definition of Singapore Residents. This includes: (a) Companies which are at least 50% owned by Singapore citizens (b) Financial institutions in Singapore that are governed under MAS Notice 757 or equivalent. All other entities not captured above are considered Non-Residents. SGD products FX spot Current account: None Capital account: None Avg. ticket size: USD 5 - 10m Bid/ask spread: SGD 0.0002 Avg. daily vol: USD 3bn-4bn Ref. source: Reuters page <SGD=> Fixing page: <ABSFIX01> FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: Banks may lend SGD to Non-Resident financial entities for any purpose, whether in Singapore or overseas, as long as aggregate facilities do not exceed SGD 5m per entity. Where amounts exceed SGD 5m per entity, banks should not extend SGD credit facilities to Non-Resident financial entities. Banks may not lend SGD if there is reason to believe that the SGD proceeds may be used for SGD currency speculation. Banks are required to report monthly to the MAS their aggregate outstanding SGD lending to Non-Residents. Avg. ticket size: USD 50 – 100mn Tenor: Overnight up to 10 years Bid/ask spread: 0.00002 for 1M tenor, 0.0001 for 6M tenor, 0.0005 for 12M tenor Avg. daily vol: USD 1 bn – 1.5 bn Ref. Source: Reuters page <SGDF=> Fixing page: <ABSFIX01> ( VWAP between 0730 - 1630 hrs) FX options Regulatory: No restrictions. ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 30m for Bid/ask spread: 0.7 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 200m Ref. Source: Reuters page <SGD=D2> Fixing page: Reuters page <ABSIRFIX01>, 11:00a.m. Singapore time Onshore CCS Regulatory: No restrictions Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 41 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Avg. ticket size: SGD 50m for tenor shorter than 2Y SGD 20m for tenor longer than 2Y Tenor: Out to 30yr. Liquid tenors are 1 - 10 years Bid/ask spread: 3-5bp for tenor 2Y-10Y, 2 bps for tenor shorter than 2y, 10bp for tenor longer than 10Y Avg. daily vol: USD 50m. Actual daily trade volumes tend to be volatile as CCS is infrequently traded. Ref. Source: Reuters page <PYSGD>, <ISGDIRS> Fixing page: SGD SOR fixing on <ABSFIX01> IRS/OIS Regulatory: No restrictions Avg. ticket size: SGD 50m for OIS, but has become very illiquid since 2010 SGD 100m for IRS shorter than 2Y SGD 10m - 20m for IRS longer than 2Y Tenor: IRS: out to 30 years, with liquid tenors of 1 – 10 years. OIS: out to 2 year, with liquid tenors of 1 – 12 months. Bid/ask spread: 5bp for OIS, 2-3bp for IRS Avg. Daily Vol: OIS is very illiquid, and trades only a few times a year SGD 500m for IRS shorter than 2Y SGD 500m for IRS longer than 2Y Ref. Source: DB Reuters page < ABSFIXDBAS>, DB Bloomberg page <DBSZ9>, Broker Reuters page <PYSGD>, <TRADSGD1> Fixing page: < ABSFIX01> SGD SOR rates as of 1100 hrs London time Short-term money market instruments (t-bills/repo/SIBOR/SOR) Regulatory: As per FX forwards/swaps Liquidity: Mostly concentrated on O/N and 1W for cash and repo market Avg. ticket size: Various Bid/ask spread: 12bp for cash market, 10bp for repo Avg. daily vol: SGD 700mn-1bn for cash market, SGD 50 m – 100 m for repo Ref. Source: Reuters page <PYSGD> <ISGD01> Government bond Regulatory: No restrictions on foreign participation. Avg. ticket size: SGD 5m Bid/ask spread: SGD 0.05 for tenors below 2 years: SGD 0.10 for tenors below 7 years, SGD 0.30 for tenors below 15 years, SGD 0.40 for tenors above 15 years Avg. daily vol: SGD 1000m Ref. Source: Reuters page <0#SGBMK=>, DB Bloomberg page <DABA9>, Bloomberg page <DABA1> Loan Regulatory: As per FX forwards/swaps Liquidity: Good for both USD and SGD Spread: USD loans are LIBOR and SIBOR based while SGD are normally priced off cost of funds. Page 42 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Deposit Regulatory: SGD denominated deposits are subject to reserve requirements. Liquidity: Good up to 6m Clearing and settlement regulation For foreign investors, SGS can be cleared using international bodies such as Euroclear and Clearstream as well as MAS electronic book entry clearing system as long as the investor has an account onshore. Taxation Foreigners are not taxed on capital gains or interest income proceeds from Singapore government securities. In addition, there is also no restriction on the acquisition of securities by foreign investors or limitations on the repatriation of income, capital gains, and capital. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 43 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies South Korea From 1964 through 1970, the won was pegged to the USD at 130. Over the next ten years, the official rate depreciated to 580 in several large steps. In 1980, the fixed regime was replaced with a heavily managed basket rate which included the SDR and major trading partners’ currencies. Starting in 1989, KRW was allowed to fluctuate in a range against its basic basket rate, and in 1990, the effective rate was replaced by a (previous day’s) market average rate (MAR). The MAR provided an anchor for intervention bands, which were widened from +/-0.25% to 2.25% over the period 19901995. This band was expanded to 10% in November 1997 during the Asian Crisis, then abandoned a month later and the won was allowed to float. The Bank of Korea sets monetary policy primarily through the 7-day repo rate. The central bank has a medium-term inflation target of 3%, though this includes a tolerance range which is currently +/1%. The central bank is also sensitive to asset price inflation, particularly in housing and equity markets, and potential impact on the exchange rate when setting its monetary policy. Both the Ministry of Strategy and Finance (MoSF) and BoK are able to intervene in the FX market. BoK’s intervention has mostly been oriented towards “smoothing”, but as the won appreciated rapidly in 2009/10, mid-2011, and approached post-crisis lows again in 2013, the central bank resorted to more aggressive intervention aimed at slowing down appreciation and defending key levels. The BoK is also active in the FX swap market, which it uses as a sterilization instrument. Given the large size of its forward book, its FX swap activity can alter the level of USD funding rates in local markets and thereby exert an indirect impact on spot USD/KRW. Korea’s capital account regime is one of the most liberal in Asia. However the currency is not completely convertible and forward hedging can be subject to an underlying economic transaction. Portfolio investment is not highly restricted, though in 2011 the government reintroduced a withholding tax on foreign bond investors. Macro prudential measures have been taken that reduce appreciation pressure and lessen the vulnerability of the domestic system to external stress. Key measures include a steady reduction in short-term external debt limits and curbs on local foreign currency derivative positions. Offshore borrowing by Korean corporates is subject to changing regulation, and the government tends to encourage ODI as a way of creating a balance in international payments account. A unique aspect of Korea’s FX market is that local banks are allowed to freely arbitrage the offshore NDFs, resulting in the spread between onshore and offshore forward curves being virtually zero. Page 44 USD/KRW exchange rate 1700 1600 1500 1400 1300 1200 1100 1000 900 800 700 600 500 90 95 00 05 10 USD/KRW spot rate and 3M fwd premium 1800 Spot Rate 40 Forward Points (RHS) 1700 30 1600 1500 20 1400 1300 10 1200 0 1100 1000 -10 900 800 -20 00 02 04 06 08 10 12 USD/KRW 3M historical vs. implied volatility % Spread (RHS) 60 % 3M Implied 8 3M Realized 6 50 4 2 40 0 30 -2 -4 20 -6 10 -8 -10 0 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Ministry of Strategy and Finance (MOSF) is the financial policy maker. (http://english.mosf.go.kr/). The Bank of Korea (BoK) is the central bank. It is independent of MOSF and is primarily responsible for inflation targeting formulation and the implementation of monetary policy. It enforces foreign exchange laws and monitors market activity. (http://www.bok.or.kr). Foreign exchange policy is principally determined by MOSF, while BOK, oversees foreign exchange movements Key pieces of legislation govern ring FX are the Foreign Exchange Transaction Act (FETA) and Foreign Exchange Transaction Regulations (FETR). Supervisory functions are consolidated under the Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC), which was established in 1998 (http://www.fsc.go.kr/eng), and its executive enforcement arm, the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS), which was established in 1999 (http://english.fss.or.kr). While derivatives are mostly used for hedging purposes, particularly for general investors pursuant to Financial Investment Services and Capital Market Acts, some investment activities are allowed for ‘professional investors’ only. In addition, authorities can from time to time make changes to FX regulations so as to deter speculators or minimize the impact of speculation on the volatility of the exchange rate. Documentation requirements for doing business in Korea can be found at (http://www.investkorea.org). Onshore KRW products Korean financial institutions which meet qualifying conditions and are registered with the MOSF as an FX handling institution may enter into general interest rate or currency derivative transactions with Non-Residents without MOSF approval. All credit-linked derivative transactions are to be reported to the BoK. KRW may not be provided to Non-Residents in excess of certain limits except in connection with their investments in Korea and other legitimate transactions. Korean securities companies which obtain a licence for OTC derivatives may deal in derivative transactions relating to securities, interest rates or indices. FX spot Regulatory: Supporting documentation (including a declaration or approval of proper regulatory authority for a capital transaction, i.e., a loan, guarantee or investment) should be submitted to a foreign exchange bank (FX Bank) prior to trading if there is to be physical delivery. The documentation handling process usually takes 1 to 2 days. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: KRW 0.1 – 0.5 Avg. daily vol: USD 7 – 9bn Ref. source: Reuters page <KFTC01> Trading hours: 9:00am – 3:00pm, Seoul time (No lunch time) FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: As per spot. Hedging is permitted for underlying transactions with onshore banks. However, w.e.f. January 2010, exporters are not allowed to hedge more than 100% of their receivables. For local banks, forward positions are capped at 30% of the previous month-end equity capital (down from 50% before) while foreign bank branches have their forward positions capped at 150% of the previous month-end equity capital (down from 200% before). Avg. ticket size: <1week USD 100mn, 1mth to 3mth USD 50mn , 6mth and longer USD 30mn Tenor: Overnight to 1 year Bid/ask spread: KRW 0.01 for 1 day tenor, KRW 0.05 for 1 month tenor, KRW 0.10 for 2 months tenor, KRW 0.10 for 3 months tenor, KRW 0.3 for 6 months tenor, KRW 0.6 for 9 months – 1 year tenors Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 45 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Daily vol: ON, TN, SN at USD 3-5bn, 1mth to 1y at USD 2 – 3bn Ref. Source: Reuters page <KRWF=>, <KFTC23>, <KMB18> FX options Regulatory: If the upfront premium is over 20% of the notional, the trade needs prior approval from the BOK. Following the change in regulation (i.e. the need for approval from BoK), domestic participation in the onshore FX option market is low. For Non-Residents, if there is to be physical delivery at maturity, underlying trade documentation (e.g., invoice) must be submitted. Avg. ticket size: USD 30mn Bid/ask spread: 0.6 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 200 – 500mn Ref. source: Reuters page <NITTAN10>, <GFIOPT> Fixing page: MAR, Reuters page <KFTC18> 15:30pm Seoul time Onshore CCS Regulatory: Non-Residents are not allowed to access the onshore deliverable market unless they have a valid underlying transaction. Avg. ticket size: USD 10-30mn Tenor: 1 – 10 years Bid/ask spread: 5 – 10bp Avg. daily vol: USD 500m Ref. source: Reuters page <PYKRW> Fixing page: Reuters page <KFTC18> IRS Regulatory: Non-residents are allowed to do IRS with onshore banks provided that they have proper underlying documents, i.e. hedging evidence, etc. However, non residents cannot do IRS with non banks in Korea without prior approval from BOK. Avg. ticket size: KRW 50bn – 100bn Tenor: 1 – 20 years Bid/ask spread: 2-3 bps Avg. daily vol: KRW 1-2 trillion Ref. source: Reuters page <PYKRW> Fixing page: 91-day Korean Local Banks CD rate at Reuters <KRCD=KQ> FRA/Single Period Swap (SPS) Tenor: 1mx4m, 2x5, 3x6, 6x9, 9x12 Avg. ticket size: 200bn Bid/ask spread: 5 - 10bp Fixing page: 91-day Korean Local Banks CD rate at Reuters <KRCD=KQ> Ref. source: Reuters page <IKRWIRS> Short-term money market instruments (CD/CP/repo) Regulatory: Non-Residents are allowed to access the onshore deliverable market with onshore banks with relevant licenses in place to handle such products particularly Repo. Page 46 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies To transact with non bank counterpart onshore, it requires a case by case review for each product for potential regulatory restrictions such as BOK prior approval depending on who the offshore resident is versus who the onshore counterpart is. Avg. ticket size: KRW 50bn for CD/CP, KRW 5bn for repo. Bid/ask spread: 5 – 10bp Avg. daily vol: USD 750m Ref. source: CD/CP – Reuters page <KBOND02> Government bond Regulatory: Non-residents are allowed to access the onshore government bond market if registered with the FSS. Avg. ticket size: KRW 10 bn Bid/ask spread: 1 – 3bp Avg. daily vol: KRW 20tn Ref. source: Reuters page <KBOND02> Loan Regulatory: Loans between Residents and Non-Residents generally require relevant declaration or approval with the proper regulatory authority. Liquidity: Good Spread: USD LIBOR based Deposit Regulatory: Liquidity: Non-Residents are allowed to remit foreign currency and exchange it for KRW, which may be deposited with an onshore bank. However, other capital transactions (i.e., loans, guarantees, investments, etc.) are subject to relevant requirements for declaration or approval. Good Offshore KRW products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: No prior reports or approvals are required for offshore NDFs denominated in KRW and net settled in foreign currency. Fixing: The KRW NDF fix is published at 3.30pm Seoul time two business day prior to settlement and is posted on Reuters screen KFTC18. The fix is derived by using a weighted average of the onshore spot market over the entire day’s trading range prior to the fix (known as the market average rate, MAR). Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: KRW 0.3 – 0.5 Avg. daily vol: USD 1.5-2.0 bn Ref. source: Reuters page <DBNDF>, <PNDF> Fixing page: Reuters page <KFTC18> Cross fixing: EBS at time of fix Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Regulatory: No restrictions Avg. ticket size: USD 30 mn Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 47 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Bid/ask spread: 0.7 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 300mn Ref. source: DB autobahn Fixing page: Reuters page <KFTC18>, spot fixing based on the weighted-average rate of the entire day’s trading range, 3:30pm Seoul time, 2 business days before value date. Offshore NDS Regulatory: No restrictions Avg. ticket size: USD 10 – 30mn Tenor: 1 – 10 years Bid/ask spread: 10 – 20bps Avg. daily vol: USD 0 – 100mn, depending on market conditions Ref. source: Reuters page <PNDS> Fixing page: Reuters page <KFTC18>, 3:30pm Seoul time, Settlement: T+2, Floating Rate: 6M USD LIBOR, Frequency: Semi-annual, Day-count: Act/365 Clearing and settlement regulation The Korea Securities Depository (KSD), the country's sole central securities depository, conducts the clearing and settlement of securities. KSD is under the supervision of the Ministry of Strategy and Finance, the Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC), and the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS). Foreign investors need to register with the FSS and obtain an Investment Registration Number/Certificate (IRC) prior to opening accounts. In addition, prior to placing an order, foreign investors must also appoint (1) a standing proxy who will file for the IRC and open a trading account with a local securities company, (2) a custodian bank who will facilitate domestic settlement, and (3) a foreign exchange bank. However, for a resident foreign individual or corporation, standing proxy is not needed. Securities purchases or sales by non-resident investors have to be settled physically at the KSD or at a custodian bank. The original order is placed with a local broker or standing proxy. Both exchange and OTC transactions typically settle T+1. However, when foreign investments are involved, T+3 settlement is common. Taxation Effective January 2011, a withholding tax (WHT) of 14% on interest income plus 1.4% local tax (bringing total withholding tax to 15.4%) on non-resident investments in KTBs and MSBs was re-introduced. This WHT rate may be reduced by applicable double tax treaty. A 27.5% net capital gains tax, or 11% on gross sale proceeds, whichever is lower, was also introduced. Some double tax treaties do provide an exemption from capital gain tax on disposal of KTBs and MSBs by non-residents. Page 48 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Sri Lanka From independence in 1948 to 1977, the Sri Lanka Rupee (LKR) was pegged to the GBP. In 1977, opted for market-oriented reforms, and instituted a managed FX float against a basket of currencies. This was kicked off with a devaluation of 46% against the USD. The 1990s witnessed a worsening balance of payments position, putting substantial pressure on the exchange rate. In response, the exchange rate band was widened in 2000. A continual fall in foreign exchange reserves in 2001 prompted the central bank to adopt a floating exchange rate regime. The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) is responsible for conducting monetary policy, with price stability as its main objective. Its inflation management record has however been poor with a bias towards supporting growth. The central bank also helps manage the exchange rate. For much of past two decades, CBSL has preferred a stable or gently depreciating exchange rate to help foster investor confidence and diminish the foreign debt service burden for the government. Since 2011, they have been forced to shift this stance. In 2011, a deepening current account deficit on the back of strong economic growth began to exert pressure on the rupee. The trade deficit deteriorated sharply on a rising oil imports bill and as high credit growth fuelled increased imports. CBSL initially sought to limit the pressure on the rupee through FX intervention, drawing down reserves. In November 2011, they were compelled to devalue the rupee by 3%, but continued to intervene in the market to manage depreciation pressure. In February 2012, the central bank finally stepped away allowing the LKR to float freely, whereupon it depreciated a further 17% to new lows. With the trade deficit stabilizing, as CBSL hiked rates, curbed credit growth and imposed import tariffs – LKR actually appreciated before tapering related volatility in 2013 led to pressure once again. USD/LKR exchange rate 140 130 120 110 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 90 95 00 05 10 3M SLIBOR vs. USD LIBOR 16 4.0 SLIBOR 3M US LIBOR 3M (RHS) 14 3.5 12 3.0 10 2.5 8 2.0 6 1.5 4 1.0 2 0.5 0 1-Jun-09 0.0 1-Jun-10 1-Jun-11 1-Jun-12 1-Jun-13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Sri Lanka is dependent on other inflow sources. Tourism receipts and remittances provide some support. The end of civil war in 2009 also helped attract capital flows. FDI into hotels and tourism have increased. The capital account is restricted in many ways, but in 2010 the CBSL announced several key liberalization measures, including allowing foreign investors to buy LKR denominated corporate bonds, allowing local corporates to borrow in foreign currencies and allowing foreigners to maintain foreign currency accounts in Sri Lanka. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 49 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Ministry of Finance is responsible for fiscal policy (http://www.treasury.gov.lk), while the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) undertakes monetary policy (http://www.centralbanklanka.org). The Exchange Control department formulates FX regulations, while the Public Debt department is in charge of the Government borrowing programme. The Board of Investment (BOI) website gives information on setting up a business, investment incentives, guidelines etc. (http://www.boi.lk). Key pieces of legislation are the Monetary Act, Banking Act no 30 of 1988 (as Amended), Exchange Control Act, Securities and Exchange Commission of Sri Lanka Act. Foreign Nationals are allowed to invest in LKR denominated Govt Securities, local share market and corporate debt market through the Securities Investment Account (SIA). 12.5% of outstanding local currency Govt securities are allocated for foreign investors. Inward remittance routed through the SIA accounts for the above categories can be repatriated freely. Foreign Nationals are allowed to place onshore foreign currency and local currency time and savings deposits with local commercial banks under Special Foreign Investment Deposit Accounts (SFIDA). Minimum account balance of USD 10,000 or equivalent. Onshore LKR products FX spot Regulatory: There are no restrictions on local trade/service-related and stock market transactions. Capital account transactions require prior approval from Exchange Control department. Profits from FDI with flagship status can be repatriated under special clauses agreed with the Board of Investment (BOI). Avg. ticket size: USD 1mn Bid/ask spread: LKR 0.10 Avg. daily vol: USD 25 – 30mn Ref. source: Reuters Page <LKR=> Trading hours: 9:00am – 4:00pm Sri Lanka time FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: Forward delivery purchases by clients must be backed by a trade transaction with documentary evidence of LC/PO/invoice etc. Hedging FX exposure through derivative products is permitted. Avg. ticket size: USD 1mn Tenor: Up to 6 months; market quotes up to 1 year, but is more liquid up to 6 months Bid/ask spread: LKR 0.20 Avg. daily vol: USD 15 - 25m Ref. Source: Reuters Page <LKRF=> Short-term money market instruments (CD/CP/repo) Regulatory: Foreigners are allowed to participate in s/t money market instruments. More guidelines are available on the MOF and CBSL websites. Avg. ticket size: USD 1mn Bid/ask spread: 25bp Avg. daily vol: USD 10mn Page 50 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: Foreigners are permitted to own up to 12.5% of outstanding stock of government securities Liquidity: Poor Avg. ticket size: USD 1mn Bid/ask spread: 25bp Avg. daily vol: USD 10mn Loan Regulatory: No restrictions for locally incorporated companies Liquidity: Fair Spread: 25 – 200bp Deposit Regulatory: No restrictions for locally incorporated companies Liquidity: Fair Spread 25 – 200bp Clearing and settlement regulation The central bank acts as the depository and clearing house for government securities and T-bills through its Central Depository System (CDS) system, where banks and institutions hold bond ledgers and current accounts with it. Transactions are cleared on a delivery versus payment (DVP) basis and are settled electronically. The settlement date convention of successful bids is T+2 days from the day of auction. Investors are required to maintain accounts with commercial banks or primary dealers for the cash settlement of their transactions. In the secondary market, primary dealers and commercial banks quote their bid daily and offer prices for government securities. Investors can select from the best deals. Taxation For Treasury bills and Treasury bonds, a 10% withholding tax on interest income is collected at the primary issue. However, no stamp duty is payable. For rupee loans, a 10% withholding tax on interest income will be deducted from coupon payments. For Sri Lanka Development Bonds, income tax paid in Sri Lanka will be reimbursed. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 51 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Taiwan The “new” Taiwan dollar, or NTD, was first issued in 1949. It was initially pegged to the US dollar at 40.0 with the aim of ending the hyperinflation which plagued Republic of China government during its final years on the Mainland. This rate remained in place until the US dollar began to slide after the Bretton Woods system broke down in the early 1970s. TWD was repegged at 38.0 in 1973, and the USD link subsequently abandoned with a further revaluation to 36.0 in 1978. In its place, a managed basket float was implemented, with volatility being constrained within a +/-2.5% band around the previous day’s fix against a range of major currencies. Nonetheless, with the country running persistent current account surpluses, upward pressure on the Taiwan dollar persisted and USD/TWD stood at 28.0 when it was finally allowed to float in 1989. The Central Bank of China is responsible for conducting both monetary and exchange rate policies. There is no formal inflation target, but the CBC has a medium-term objective of keeping M2 growth in a range. The central bank’s main policy instrument is the discount rate, though in practice it uses several tools such as OMOs and the FX rate to influence monetary conditions. Over the past two decades, the TWD market has remained characterized by heavy two-way intervention from the central bank. The objective is to smooth dayto-day volatility in the spot market and ensure that currency moves reflect fundamentals and real economic transactions rather than speculative activity. Preventing excessive appreciation of the TWD is also desirable to maintain export competitiveness. Such active management had led CBC to become one of the largest holders of foreign reserves. CBC has historically tended to enjoy positive carry on its reserves sterilization given low domestic rates. Taiwan continues to enjoy large current account surpluses, and is consequently a significant net investor to the world with large overseas portfolio investment by local asset managers. Associated hedging activities have a meaningful – generally depressive – impact on the NDF curve, resulting in negative carry to the TWD. This has led it to regularly be seen as a regional funder carry trades. USD/TWD exchange rate 40 35 30 25 20 90 Page 52 00 05 10 USD/TWD spot rate and 3M NDF premium 37 Spot Rate 0.40 Forward Points (RHS) 35 0.20 33 0.00 31 -0.20 29 -0.40 27 -0.60 25 -0.80 04 06 08 10 12 USD/TWD 3M historical vs. implied volatility Spread (RHS) 3M Realized % 16 3M Implied 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 04 A recent improvement in ties with the Mainland, have led to several initiatives to facilitate cross-border investment and direct conversion of RMB into TWD at licensed institutions. In 2013, direct clearing and offshore trading of RMB began Taiwan with the launch of yuan-denominated operations such as deposits, loans and remittances. The NT dollar is convertible for current account transactions, but more restricted on the capital account. 95 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Central Bank of China (CBC) regulates Taiwan’s foreign exchange market (http://www.cbc.gov.tw/EngHome/). The regulator of banking activities is the Banking Bureau which comes under the Financial Supervisory Commission (http://www.fscey.gov.tw/mp.asp?mp=5). FX or derivative transactions must be approved by the relevant regulatory authority. Regulated entities such as banks or insurance companies are not permitted to engage in new products without explicit approval. Combinations of approved products may be deemed by regulators to be new products requiring fresh approval. The Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII) system was abolished in October 2003 after having served its purpose for more than ten years. The current regulation on foreign portfolio investment in Taiwan is now classified into four categories, namely, onshore and offshore foreign institutional investors (FINI) and onshore and offshore overseas Chinese and foreign individual investors (FIDI). For more details, please see (http://www.tse.com.tw/en/investor/foreign_invest/OCFID_01.php). Onshore TWD products FX spot Current account: Capital account: Documentation must be submitted to banks. Each company has an annual quota of USD 50m to buy and sell USD/TWD without supporting documentation (buy and sell quotas are kept separately). Prior approval from CBC must be obtained. For FINI, there are no restrictions once investors are registered with the Taiwan Stock Exchange Corporation. For FIDI, there is a limit of USD 5m for investors. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: TWD 0.010 – 0.025 Avg. daily vol: USD 800mn Ref. source: Reuters page <TAIFX1> Trading hours: 9:00am – 12:00nn, 2:00pm – 4:00pm FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: As per FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Tenor: Overnight to 5 years Bid/ask spread: TWD 0.005 – 0.040 Avg. daily vol: USD 1.2bn Ref. source: Reuters page <TAIFX2> FX options Regulatory: Only plain vanilla type options are allowed for onshore corporates. Documentation must be submitted to banks upon physical delivery. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Tenor: 1 – 3 months Bid/ask spread: 0.5 vol Avg. daily vol: USD 100m Ref. Source: Reuters page <TTDS>, < TAIFX1>, <PNDF> Fixing page: Reuters page <TAIFX1>, 11:00a.m. Taipei time Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 53 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Onshore CCS Regulatory: Entities with a legal onshore status are allowed to access the onshore deliverable market. Approved categories: - Securities investment. - Domestic securities company raising funds locally or overseas for investment in the local or overseas equity market. - Inward equity investment for registered financial institutional investor. - Resident company’s medium or long-term foreign currency debt borrowing from either the local or overseas market. - Overseas institutions issuing convertible or non-convertible bonds in Taiwan. - Local institution issuing overseas convertible or non-convertible bonds which have been approved for conversion into TWD. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Tenor: Up to 10 years Bid/ask spread: 10 – 20bp Avg. daily vol: USD 10 – 20mn Ref. source: Reuters page <ITWDIRS>, <BGCTWD> IRS/FRA Regulatory: Entities with a legal onshore status are allowed to access the onshore market. Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: TWD 300-500mn Tenor: 1 – 10 years Bid/ask spread: 2 - 3bp Avg. daily vol: TWD 3 – 5bn Ref. source: Reuters page <ITWDIRS> <TRADTWD1> Fixing page: 2 90-day Taiwan CP rate on Reuters 6165 or TWCPBA nd Short-term money market instruments (BA/CP, repo) Regulatory: Entities with a legal onshore status are allowed to access the onshore market. Avg. ticket size: TWD 10mn – 1bn for BA/CP, TWD 50mn – 1bn for repo Bid/ask spread: 5 – 10bp Avg. daily vol: USD 750mn Ref. source: Telerate 6165 for BA/CP, Reuters page <0#TWBMK=> for repo Government bond Regulatory: Entities with a legal onshore status are allowed to access the onshore market. Effective November 11, 2010, FINI’s (foreign institutional investors’) investment in government bonds should not exceed 30% of net remitted-in funds. Avg. ticket size: TWD 50mn Bid/ask spread: 1bp (for benchmark 10-year), 10bps for off-the-run bond Avg. daily vol: TWD 5-50bn (more than 80% of the trading volume is from the 10-year benchmark, but recently volume decreased to 20-50bn) Ref. source: Bloomberg page <TGB GOVT> Page 54 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Loan Regulatory: Entities with a legal onshore status are allowed to access the onshore market. Liquidity: Good; there are active loan markets in both USD and TWD. Spread: USD loans are LIBOR and SIBOR based. TWD loans are priced off the cost of funds plus a spread on floating rate such as CP rate, or prime rate. Deposit Regulatory: Entities with legal onshore presence are allowed to access the onshore market. Liquidity: Good up to 3 years Offshore TWD products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: Onshore banks can only trade NDFs with locally registered banks and their offshore sister branches. Onshore banks are not allowed to book NDFs with corporations. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: TWD 0.01 – 0.02 Avg. daily vol: USD 1.0bn (for tenors less than 1Y) Ref. source: Reuters page <DBNDF> and <PNDF> Fixing page: Reuters page <TAIFX1>, spot fixing determined by the first contribution that CBC receives at 11:00am Taipei time, 2 business days before value date Cross Fixing: EBS at time of fix Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Regulatory: Potential restrictions for onshore entities. Offshore entities have no restrictions. ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 30 mn Bid/ask spread: 0.7 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 100mn Ref. source: DB autobahn Fixing page: Reuters page <TAIFX1>, spot fixing determined by the first contribution that CBC receives at 11:00am Taipei time, 2 business days before value date. Offshore NDS market Regulatory: . ISDA documentation applies. Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Tenor: 2 – 10 years Bid/ask spread: 30-50 bps Avg. daily vol: USD 0 – 10mn Ref. source: Reuters page <PNDS> Fixing page: Reuters page <TAIFX1>, Settlement: T+2, Floating Rate: 6M USD LIBOR, Frequency: Semiannual, Day-count: Act/360 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 55 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Clearing and settlement regulation The Taiwan Securities Central Depository (TSCD) is the only central clearing and depository system in Taiwan. It is a quasi government entity owned by the Taipei Securities Dealers Association, and Fuh Hwa Securities Company Its main objectives are: — providing book-entry of securities transactions; — clearing and settlement of securities traded on the TSEC and GTSM exchanges; — clearing and settling both cash and securities; — computer process handling for the clearing of futures market; — registering securities issued in dematerialized form; — Providing computer process of book-entry for participants; — Auditing of shareholders affairs for issuing companies. Government bonds are traded through the Electronic Bond Trading System (EBTS) and settled T+2 on a delivery against payment basis. On the other hand, repo and reverse repo trades are settled on the trading day itself. Taxation Foreign investors are subjected to tax at 15% on interest income from bonds (i.e. short-term bills, asset backed securities, government bonds, corporate bonds, and financial debentures. However, there is no tax on capital gains. A tax guarantor, usually the local sub-custodian, must be appointed to ensure appropriate taxes have been paid before foreign investors can remit their proceeds. Page 56 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Thailand After being a fixed USD peg during post-war reconstruction, the baht was moved onto a managed float in 1955. This was a transitory measure to prepare for absorption into the par-value gold standard, which took place at a rate of 20.8 per USD in 1963. That rate was successfully maintained until 1972. Thereafter, with the USD falling heavily, Thailand introduced a 4.5% fluctuation range and pushed up the official rate to 20.00. Mirroring broader regional developments, the baht’s anchor was switched to a trade-weighted basket of currencies in 1978, with fluctuations allowed within a broad trading band. This system remained in place through the mid-1990s, with only periodic broadening of the basket’s composition and relatively minor devaluations. When the Asian financial crisis hit, Thailand was forced to float the baht on July 2 1997, resulting in its fall from around 27 to the USD to 55. Thailand now operates a managed-float FX regime. The Bank of Thailand (BoT) has been conducting monetary policy under a flexible inflation targeting framework since 2000, wherein the central bank pays attention not only to inflation but also to economic growth and financial stability. The central bank targets the core inflation rate with a medium-term aim of keeping it between 0.5% and 3%. The central bank intervenes in the FX market to smooth volatility. BoT has often referenced guiding USD/THB to move in line with key trade partner currencies. However, a tumultuous experience with massive capital flow volatility and failed FX intervention during the 1997 Crisis has made the central bank resort to capital controls to influence the exchange rate in recent years. The THB NDF market never took off due to the presence of a parallel offshore (deliverable) market. In late 2006 however, the central bank imposed a 30% Unremunerated Reserve Requirement (URR) on all new inflows, raising the cost for foreigners to acquire THB from onshore; consequently offshore THB traded at a premium (in extremely thin volumes) to the onshore market. BoT eventually scrapped the URR in February 2008, and since then, the onshore and offshore FX rates have converged. In 2010, the government imposed a 15% withholding tax on foreign bond investors to try to reduce capital inflows and upward appreciation pressure on the currency. In 2012, BoT pushed forth with its “Capital Account Liberalization Master Plan” relaxing regulations on outward direct and portfolio investment by Thai companies and individuals, to encourage more balanced capital flows and reduce pressure on the baht. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. USD/THB exchange rate 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 90 95 00 05 10 USD/THB spot rate and 3M fwd premium 43 Spot Rate 150.00 Forward Points (RHS) 41 100.00 39 37 50.00 35 0.00 33 31 -50.00 29 -100.00 27 25 -150.00 04 06 08 10 12 USD/THB 3M historical vs. implied volatility Spread (RHS) 3M Realized % 20 18 3M Implied % 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Page 57 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Bank of Thailand (BoT) is responsible for monetary policy. The BOT also regulates all banking activities and exchange controls. (http://www.bot.or.th). The Ministry of Finance (MOF) oversees fiscal policy. (http://www.mof.go.th/). FX or derivative transactions should be for hedging of or transactions in, an underlying trade or asset investment flow. Banks are authorised to ensure that there are no speculative transactions with non-bank entities. Since June 2001, BoT has been more sensitive to the nature of transactions in the THB market. BoT introduced measures in late 2003 to curb speculation pressure on THB, which included but was not limited to: (1) a ban on THB direct lending to non-residents by financial institutions (2) a restriction on investment in nonresident THB instruments by financial institutions (3) a ban on repo, reverse repo, securities sell & buyback with non residents by financial institutions, (4) a restriction on funding THB through the FX market (e.g. converting FCY to THB with value same-day or tomorrow) or absorbing THB liquidity in the FX market (e.g. converting THB in NRBA or NRBS to FCY with value same-day or tomorrow) by non-residents with financial institutions. These restrictions only apply for transactions that are not supported by valid underlying trades or investments in Thailand. In September 2010, in an effort to slow inflows into the local bond market, MOF announced an increase in withholding tax on foreign investments in bonds issued by Thai government agencies (including BOT and state enterprises) from zero to 15%, to be charged on interest income and capital gains. In October 2012, however, BoT started to relax some of the FX regulations: Thai residents can hedge their overseas investments freely Measures to limit THB speculation by non-residents were relaxed. For example, domestic financial institutions can provide more to or borrow more from non residents from transactions undertaken without underlying trade and investment to THB500m per group of non residents per financial institutions. Onshore THB products FX spot Regulatory: There is no restriction on entering into spot transactions with non-resident counterparties to fund their investments or trade in Thailand; underlying documents need to be provided. Similarly, to repatriate THB funds offshore, there are no spot restrictions if the THB funds are from valid investment or trades in Thailand. Non-residents may open Thai Baht accounts with authorized banks in Thailand as follows: (1) Non-resident Baht Account for Securities (NRBS): The account may be debited or credited for the purpose of investment in securities and other financial instruments such as equity instruments, debt instruments, unit trusts, financial derivatives transactions traded on the Thailand Futures Exchange and Agricultural Futures Exchange of Thailand. (2) Non-resident Baht Account (NRBA): The account may be debited or credited for general purposes except funds related to investment in securities such as trade, services, foreign direct investment, investment in immovable assets, and loans. The total daily outstanding balances for each type of account shall not exceed THB300 million per non-resident. Transfers between different types of accounts are not allowed.(http://www.bot.or.th/English/ForeignExchangeRegulations/FXRegulation/Pages/Excha ngeControlLaw.aspx) Avg. ticket size: USD 3-5 m Bid/ask spread: THB 0.01-0.03 Avg. daily vol: USD 0.5-0.8 bn Ref. source: Reuters page <THB=> Page 58 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: For hedging purposes only. In cases of hedging without underlying exposure, transactions must be executed within the regulatory limits as described in the regulatory framework section above. Offshore counterparties with underlying exposures can hedge with onshore banks. Non-residents have to provide the underlying documents before trade execution. Underlying transactions must be verified every 2 weeks. Avg. ticket size: USD 20 mn Tenor: less than or equal to 1 year Bid/ask spread: THB 0.01-2.00 (depends on the tenor) Avg. daily vol: USD 0.6 - 1.5 bn Ref. Source: Reuters page <THBF=TH> FX options Regulatory: Onshore options are allowed for hedging of real underlying exposures. In cases of hedging without underlying exposures, transactions must be executed within the regulatory limit as described in the regulatory framework section above. FIs must verify the evidence for the customer’s underlying exposure. A bi-weekly review is required to ensure that the value of the underlying is not less than that of the option contract. There is currently no onshore interbank options market in Thailand. Avg. ticket size: USD 5m -20 m Bid/ask spread: 1 - 3 Vol Avg. daily vol: USD 20m Ref. Source: Nil. Fixing page: Reuters page <THBFIX=TH>, 11:00a.m local time Onshore CCS Regulatory: Non-Residents are not allowed to access the onshore deliverable market unless substantiated by an underlying economic transaction. Transactions must be between banks and clients with supporting underlying economic transactions. In cases of hedging without underlying exposures, transactions must be executed within the regulatory limits as described in the regulatory framework section above. Offshore can trade CCS (deliverable market) with offshore counterparties but the prices are different from onshore, and the market is not liquid. Avg. ticket size: USD 5-30 mn Tenor: 1-10 year Bid/ask spread: 20 bp Avg. daily vol: USD 50m Ref. Source: Reuters page <PYTHB> IRS/FRA Regulatory: Fixing rates are based on fxswap implied rate with USD from SIBOR but fixing on OIS is based on o/n cash rate. Non-Residents are allowed to undertake IRS/FRA with the following conditions: 1) transactions shall not result in banks receiving negative interest payments and 2) banks shall under such transactions pay non-residents in foreign currencies. Avg. ticket size: USD 15-65 mn Tenor: 1m-10 year Bid/ask spread: 2-7 bps Avg. daily vol: USD 0.5-2bn Ref. Source: Reuters page <PYTHB> Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 59 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Fixing page: Reuters page <THBFIX> for IRS/FRA, Reuters page <BOT03> for OIS Short-term money market instruments (Bill of exchange/t-bills/CP/repo/Promissory Note, P/N) Regulatory: Commercial banks are generally not allowed to issue THB paper to raise fund from nonresidents or purchased THB papers issued by non-residents in the primary markets. In secondary markets, commercial banks are not allowed to hold commercial paper (including other exposures) worth more than 25% (per name of issuer) of the bank’s capital (single lending limit). This is only applicable for banks which operate in Thailand and for credit facilities granted in THB only. Foreign banks operating in Thailand face this ruling for all their onshore branches. If a foreign bank wishes to purchase THB exchange bills, the amount must be consolidated with all granted credit and compared with 25% of onshore capital. For interbank transactions, the maximum allowance is 60% of the capital. Avg. ticket size: OTC – as per request Bid/ask spread: Varies, based on LIBOR plus a spread to the implied swap curve Avg. daily vol: Unable to estimate as highly irregular Ref. Source: Reuters page <THBF=> Government bond Regulatory: Non-residents can buy onshore paper but repo funding, including sell and buyback with onshore commercial banks, is not allowed. A 15% withholding tax applies to capital gains and interest income, depending on type of debt instruments (double taxation agreements however allows for exemption of WHT on capital gains but not on interest income) Avg. ticket size: THB 20m Bid/ask spread: 1 - 5bp Avg. daily vol: THB 5bn Ref. Source: Reuters page <0#THTSY=>, Bloomberg page <DABA3> Loan Regulatory: Onshore banks are not allowed to make direct lending/borrowing in THB to non-residents. However, onshore banks can provide THB liquidity to non-residents (e.g. via THB OD or via FX swap market) where transactions are undertaken without underlying exposures. In such cases, the total outstanding balance executed by each bank shall not exceed THB 300 million per group of non-residents. Liquidity: Good for both USD and THB Spread: THB loans are priced off the cost of funds plus a spread to the prime rate. Deposit Regulatory: Liquidity: THB Deposits (NRBA and NRBS) placed with onshore banks are subject to a 0.46% tax as an FIDF charge. In general, BOT regulation prohibits interest payment for THB Deposits. Good Offshore THB products Offshore Forwards Regulatory: Lending restriction to onshore applies. No borrowing from onshore is permitted. Avg. ticket size: USD 5m Bid/ask spread: THB 0.02 – 0.03 Avg. daily vol: USD 600m Ref. Source: Reuters page <IRFWD> Page 60 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Fixing page: Reuters page <ABSIRFIX08>, 11:00am Singapore time, 2 business days before value date Cross Fixing: EBS at time of fix Deliverable FX options Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies Avg. ticket size: USD 10 mn Bid/ask spread: 3 Vols Avg. daily vol: USD 0-5 mn Ref. Source: Nil. Fixing page: Reuters page <ABSIRFIX01>, 11:00am Singapore time Offshore CCS market Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Tenor: 1 – 5 years Bid/ask spread: 30 – 50 bps Avg. daily vol: USD 20m Ref. Source: Reuters page <EXOT> Fixing page: Reuters page <ABSFIX01>, 11:00a.m local time Clearing and settlement regulation Foreign investors can choose to settle through Euro clear offshore, or onshore using a local custodian. Local settlement typically uses physical delivery, however, there are plans for these to eventually be done on a ‘Delivery versus Payment’ (DvP) basis. This is to reduce settlement risks. Settlement at the TSD is T+2 through a net clearing and book-entry basis. The process is governed by the DvP mechanism to guarantee principal risk protection. Taxation Since September 2010, foreign investors in Thai government bonds are subject to a tax on capital gains. The tax rate is 15%, but many of Thailand’s tax treaties can reduce the rate to 10%. Interest income from bonds is exempt for nonresidents. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 61 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Vietnam Prior to the Vietnam War, North and South Vietnam followed their principal sponsors, with separate currencies linked to the US dollar and Russian rouble. Following political unification, a uniform currency, the Vietnam Dong (VND) was introduced in May 1978. Against a background of high inflation, devaluations were frequent. In 1991 special foreign exchange centres were set up in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh, at which USD/VND was auctioned. The daily closing traded rate was made applicable to all transactions. Commercial banks were required to buy at this rate and sell within a 0.5% range, later widened to 1%. An interbank FX market began operation in 1994, permitting spot and forward transactions in 6 currencies within guideline ranges stipulated by the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV). During the Asian financial crisis, the official rate was devalued by close to 20%. Finally, a new official fixing mechanism was set up in 1999 based on the daily weighted average transaction rate in the interbank foreign currency market of VND/USD. Commercial banks could set their own rate within a band of 0.1%, which was increased to 0.25% in 2002, doubled to 0.5% in early 2007, and upped again to 0.75% at yearend. In March 2009 the band was widened to +/-5%, but re-narrowed to +/- 3% by the end of the year. The official VND rate was devalued 5 times during 2009-10. The unofficial “black” market USD/VND rate traded well above the official rate, given the chain of devaluation expectations, which falling FX reserves and a large trade deficit served to exacerbate. In Feb 2011, the VND was devalued once more by a significant 9.3% against the USD to control the rising trade deficit, and the trading band was narrowed to +/- 1%. In 2012, a significant improvement in Vietnam’s external position and a fall in headline inflation reduced pressure on the VND and enabled a rebuilding in FX reserves. In June 2013, against a backdrop of tapering pressures, the VND was weakened by 1%. The State Bank of Vietnam has the responsibility for conducting monetary policy. The main policy tool is the base rate, but in practice the central bank relies on a mix of moral suasion, administrative controls, caps on bank lending rates and other regulations. The central bank sets a daily fixing for the “official” exchange rate and all transactions must be done within a +/-1% band around the fixing. In practice, a kerb market still operates locally where the exchange rate can be different from the official fixing, reflecting demand/supply factors. Dollarization persists in Vietnam, but to discourage people from holding dollar deposits at banks SBV has ruled on reducing dollar deposit rates. The dong is highly restricted for capital account transactions. Page 62 USD/VND exchange rate 22000 21000 20000 19000 18000 17000 16000 15000 14000 13000 12000 11000 10000 95 00 05 10 USD/VND official versus traded spot 22000 Spot Close Official SBV Rate 21000 20000 19000 18000 17000 16000 15000 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 3M VNIBOR vs. USD LIBOR 16 VNIBOR 3M US LIBOR 3M (RHS) 14 4.0 3.5 12 3.0 10 2.5 8 2.0 6 1.5 4 1.0 2 0.5 0 1-Jun-09 0.0 1-Jun-10 1-Jun-11 1-Jun-12 1-Jun-13 Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The main regulator and financial policy maker is the State bank of Vietnam (SBV). Website http://www.sbv.gov.vn/ A Foreign Exchange Ordinance provides the legal framework for all foreign exchange activities. Major details about foreign exchange activities and products are currently stipulated in Decree No. 160/2006/ND-CP dated 28/12/2006 Providing in Details for The Implementation of the Ordinance on Foreign Exchange (“Decree No. 160”), Circular No. 03/TT-NHNN dated 11/04/2008 Providing Guidance on Foreign Exchange Service Supply by Credit Institutions (“Circular No. 03”) and Decision 1452/QD-NHNN dated 10/11/2004 on Foreign Exchange Transactions of Credit Institutions that Are Permitted to Engage in Foreign Exchange Activities (“Decision 1452”) and Decision No. 62/2006/QD-NHNN dated 29/12/2006 on the issuance of the Regulation on the Implementation of Interest Rate Swap Transaction (“Decision No. 62”) The SBV fixes the reference rate for the VND with respect to the USD and specifies a trading band within which the currency can vary. Currently the trading band is around +/-1% of where the daily fixing is. This was reduced from 3% in February 2011. Onshore VND products FX spot market Regulatory: Supporting documentation is required when corporate clients want to buy any foreign currency against VND from the authorised FX banks (the “Authorised Banks”) for permitted purposes. Relevant supporting documents are subject to requirements of the Authorised Banks based on each purpose. State Bank of Vietnam (SBV), the central bank, controls USD/VND within a trading band. Ceiling and floor rates are used to cap spot for USD/VND at band +/-1% since 11Feb 2011. No cap on non-USD against VND. Avg. ticket size: USD 1mn Bid/ask spread: VND 10-50 Avg. daily vol: USD 600-800mn Ref. source: Reuters page" VND=" for indicative only (not tradable) as it is posted once a day at 11 am only. Real market price should be referred to local trading desk contacts. For other ccy onshore like EURVND, one can refer to "EURVND=" Reuters page which is not a real time rate but the only source for an onshore reference. The EURVND page may be different from actual rate around VND100-VND200 dong per EUR. BBG page: <VNMF> Trading hours: 8:00am – 4:00pm Vietnam time FX forward/swap/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: For FCY/VND (where FCY represents Foreign Currency), if a client buys FCY forwards, they are required to provide supporting documents on the underlying transactions, as per spot transactions. The USD/VND forward rates are also subject to forward ceiling rates. Restrictions for FX swaps are similar to FX forwards, except that no documents are required. There are no local rules governing FCY/FCY forward and swap transactions. Offshore investors are not allowed access to local FX forward and FX swap market. Liquidity: Swaps are mostly used for funding, and not trading. Good liquidity for short tenor up to 6M, but longer up to 1yr due to limit constraints and no ISDA available. Avg. ticket size: USD 1mn for FX forward and USD20m for FX swaps Tenor: Allowed max tenor is 365 days for VND related transactions, exceptions are subject to SBV’s approval Bid/ask spread: 20-100bps for FX swap Avg. daily vol: USD 30 – 100mn for forwards, USD200-500m for FX swaps Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 63 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Ref. source : FX options Regulatory: Liquidity: Onshore CCS Regulatory: Reuters page : <VNDF=> BBG page : <VNMF> Banks are allowed to trade FCY/FCY options. USD/VND options are, however, not permitted at this point. Very poor Non credit-institutions in foreign countries are not allowed to do USDVND CCS. Banks and non-bank entities who wish to do USDVND CCS for their own hedging purposes with authorised banks operating in Vietnam have to present their underlying transactions. These underlying transactions are performed in accordance with provisions of applicable laws of Vietnam, they can be deposit, issuance of or investment in valuable papers, funds borrowing, finance leasing, goods purchase in form of deferred payment. Term of a swap contract shall be agreed upon by the parties but not be in excess of the remaining terms of the underlying transactions. Liquidity: Illiquid, but improving Ref source: Reuters page <VUSCS>, BBG page: <OTC> IRS Regulatory: The terms of interest rate swap contracts shall be as agreed by the parties. Underlying docs are required for trade with corporate clients. The nominal exposure to each corporate client shall not exceed 30% of the bank’s equity. Liquidity: Very poor Ref source: Reuters page <VNDIRS>, BBG page: <OTC> Short-term money market instruments (CD/CP/repo/deposit/loan) Regulatory: Few CD/CP transactions. Repo is a new market, but legal documents like Global Master Repurchase Agreement (GMRA) are not widely accepted by local entities. Bond titles are transferred through buy/sell orders at the stock exchange, and are therefore expensive (0.025%-0.1% of transacted value). Reference rate for VND interest rate is either VNIBOR1 or EURVNDFIX=. Sometimes, VNIBOR1 is non-tradable on the interbank market due to cap on VND ceiling interest rate. Liquidity: Active among local banks Avg. ticket size: USD 5 – 20mn Government bond Regulatory: No restrictions for onshore investors. For offshore investors, there is a withholding tax of 10% of coupon received, and 0.1% on sales proceeds. The government started to issue local VND bonds in 2000, with government bonds accounting for more than 80% of total bonds outstanding. All government bonds are listed on the stock exchange, constituting a total value of USD 25bn(ADB reports). Local Commercial banks are the dominant government bond market investors in Vietnam, with a majority of bond purchases being held to maturity. The most liquid tenor is 2y-5y. Avg. ticket size: USD 3 – 5mn Bid/ask spread: 30 – 50 bps Avg. daily vol: USD 20 – 50mn Ref. Source: Reuters page <VN/DEBT>. Bloomberg page <VNBF> Page 64 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Clearing and settlement regulation To participate on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HOSE) and Hanoi Securities Trading Centre (HASTC), investors are required to get a securities transaction code, which can be obtained via opening a securities transaction account with a member securities company. On the other hand, repatriation of capital gains or profits requires a foreign currency account and VND account with a foreign custodian bank. Clearing and settlement is centralized through the Vietnam Securities Depository (VSD). Cash clearing can only be done via the Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam while securities are settled/ and held in custody by the VSD. The settlement date convention is T+1. Taxation Foreign individual and institutional investors are subject to 5% withholding tax on interest income earned from investment in bonds and 0.1% withholding tax on gross sale proceeds on the sale of bonds. Onshore brokers or custodian banks are responsible for withholding and paying the tax to authorities on behalf of foreigners. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 65 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Croatia The kuna was introduced in June 1994 after the transitional period following Croatian independence in 1991, when the Yugoslav dinar had been replaced with a Croatian dinar. The exchange rate regime is a managed float, but there is no official target band or level for EUR/HRK. However, the EUR/HRK exchange rate has been informally described as a band. The HNB (Hrvatska Narodna Banka) intervenes either directly or through FX auctions with commercial banks. The primary objective of the HNB is to maintain price stability. The exchange rate is used as an anchor for price stability; there is no explicit inflation target. Monetary policy decisions are taken by the 14-member HNB council, with a majority of two-thirds, provided two-thirds of the members are present in the meeting. The HNB meets at least ten times in one calendar year. The kuna is fully convertible and deliverable. Spot is traded in both USD/HRK and EUR/HRK but EUR/HRK is viewed as the economically correct way to take a view on the currency. EUR/HRK and USD/HRK exchange rates Source: Deutsche Bank EUR/HRK and 1Y HRK T-bill yield Source: Deutsche Bank Page 66 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The HNB control both foreign exchange and monetary policy. For more details see http://www.hnb.hr The exchange rate is set in the interbank market. Non-residents are allowed to open kuna accounts, but HNB permission is required for deposits and withdrawals exceeding EUR 30k. The HNB oversees the two settlement systems, Croatian Large Value Payments System (CLVPS) and National Clearing System (NCS); all local banks can participate. Given the high level of Euroization in the Croatian economy, HNB hold open market operations in both HRK and EUR. The principal operation of the HNB is the weekly 1W reverse repo where market participants tender government Tbills and receive kuna. The HNB can choose to accept all bids, reject some bids, or reject all bids according to the rates submitted at auction and the prevailing monetary policy. The HNB maintains standing deposit and lending facilities for overnight deposits and funding at the HNB deposit rate and lending rate, respectively. Reserve requirements are 14% for both kuna and FX. The HNB also maintains several other facilities to regulate funding and funding rates in both kuna and FX. HNB regularly hold FX auctions either selling or buying EUR in order to control the level of EUR/HRK. There is a withholding tax of 15% for non-residents; this can be reduced or eliminated with tax treaties. HRK products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 3mn Bid/ask spread: HRK 0.01 Avg. daily volume: USD 150mn Ref. source: ECB fixing <ECB37> Trading hours: 08:00-16:00 local time FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD3mn Liquid tenors: <3M Avg. daily volume: USD 50mn Bid/ask spread: HRK 0.05-0.1 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 67 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Czech Republic The Czech koruna (crown) replaced the Czechoslovak koruna at par on 8th February 1993. The koruna has been free floating since Jan 1997, when the managed float regime was abolished. Prior to January 1997, the koruna was managed against a basket of USD and DEM with intervention bands of +/-7.5% around central parity. The foreign exchange regime was fully liberalized in 1999. Czech Republic joined the EU in 2004 and therefore has a commitment to join the Euro at an unspecified future date. In order to enter the Eurozone, all five Maastricht criteria must be met including the commitment to enter ERM-II and maintain EUR/CZK +/-15% around a selected “parity” rate for at least 2 years. The primary objective of the Ceska Narodni Banka (CNB) is to maintain price stability, as defined by a target of 2% +/-1%. Policy decisions are made by the seven-member Board which meets eight times per year. USD/CZK and EUR/CZK exchange rates USD/CZK EUR/CZK (rhs) 24 30 22 28 20 26 18 24 16 14 Jan 08 Jan 09 Jan 10 Jan 11 22 Jan 12 Source: Deutsche Bank EUR/CZK and 3M implied yields The koruna is fully deliverable and convertible. Spot is liquid in both USD/CZK and EUR/CZK but EUR/CZK is the dominant cross with around 85% of transaction volume. Recently, EUR/CZK has also taken-over from USD/CZK as the most important cross in the FX forward and options markets. Source: Deutsche Bank EUR/CZK implied and historical volatility Source: Deutsche Bank Page 68 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach Czech National Bank regulates exchange rate policy and is responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.cnb.cz) The koruna is fully deliverable and convertible The major monetary policy tool of the CNB is the 2W liquidity-absorbing open-market operation conducted each week on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. The repo is competitive and the CNB accepts bids up to the level of the policy rate and to the level of the expected liquidity surplus. Since October 2008 the CNB have also held liquidityproviding operations with 2W and 3M tenors To regulate any volatility in money market rates the CNB also has overnight deposit and overnight lending facilities at the Discount rate (policy rate minus 100bp) and the Lombard rate (policy rate plus 100bp), respectively. Banks are subject to a 2% minimum reserve requirement CZK products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Bid/ask spread: CZK 0.01 Avg. daily volume: USD 1-2bn Ref. source: ECB fixing <ECB37> Trading hours: 8:30-17:00 London FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn (FX forwards); USD 100mn (FX swaps up to 3M), USD 30mn (swaps up to 1Y) Liquid Tenors: <1Y Avg. daily volume: USD 4.2bn (FX forwards + FX swaps) Bid/ask spread: CZK 0.01-0.07 FX options Avg. ticket size: EUR 10mn Liquid tenors: <1Y Avg. daily volume: USD 100mn Bid/ask spread: 1-1.5 vol IRS + FRA Avg. ticket size: USD 6.6k-15k DV01 Liquid tenors: IRS 1Y-10Y and FRAs out to 9X12 Avg. daily volume: USD 150mn -200mn IRS, USD 130mn – 365mn FRAs Bid/ask spread: 3-5bps Fixing: 3M PRIBOR for 1Y IRS; 6M PRIBOR for IRS 2Y+ Ref source: Reuters Page <PRIBOR=> Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: Bonds are bearer securities and are held in the Prague Securities Centre; investors need to arrange access through their custodian. There are no restrictions on non-resident investors. Interest is taxed at 15% but this can be reduced or eliminated with double-taxation treaties. Liquidity: 3Y-10Y Avg. ticket size: USD 1-3mn Bid/ask spread: 5bp Avg. daily volume: USD 10-50mn Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 69 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Egypt The Egyptian pound was introduced in 1836, although it was officially pegged at parity to sterling through to 1949. The peg to the USD was broken in 2000 and the EGP was formally “floated” on the 29th January 2003, abolishing the central trading rate for USD/EGP. Nevertheless, EGP is officially a managed float and the Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) currently intervenes heavily in the market. High inflation, a weak dollar and the high cost of sterilisation have meant that CBE have allowed significantly more exchange rate volatility since mid-07. Price stability is the primary objective of CBE monetary policy. The CBE do not have an explicit inflation target. However, the CBE intends to adopt a fully-fledged inflation targeting regime in the future. The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of CBE meets every six weeks to discuss monetary policy. On June 2, 2005 the CBE introduced an interest rate corridor through two standing facilities - the overnight lending and the overnight deposit facility. The interest rates on the two standing facilities define the ceiling and floor of the corridor, respectively. By setting the rates on the standing facilities, the MPC determines the corridor within which the overnight rate can fluctuate. Effectively, steering the overnight interbank rate within this corridor is the operational target of the CBE. USD/EGP exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank USD/EGP and EGP 1Y T-bill yield Full convertibility was introduced in 2003, but dealing in FX can still only be conducted by banks authorized by the CBE. An interbank FX market was launched on December 23rd 2004 after a three-month trial period. Daily volumes are approximately USD 100-200mn. Source: Deutsche Bank Page 70 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach Exchange rate policy and supervision is conducted by the Central Bank of Egypt (http://www.cbe.org.eg), which is also responsible for implementing monetary policy The main policy instruments of the CBE are the overnight deposit and lending rates; these define the bounds of the overnight inter-bank rate. The CBE interacts with the market through regular deposit auctions. The Egyptian pound is a fully convertible currency A withholding tax of 20% applies to government T-bills; this can be reduced using double taxation treaties At the onset of the political turmoil in January 2011, trading on the Egyptian stock market was suspended. The stock market reopened in March 2011, just in time to avoid a suspension from the MSCI (which would have ensued had the closure persisted for forty days). EGP products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 100k-200k Bid/ask spread: EGP 0.01 Avg. daily volume: USD 100-200mn CBE conducts 3 x USD40m auctions per week for essential imports, ad hoc auctions of up to USD800m Ref. source: NDF fixing reference Reuters <FEMF> 12:30pm Trading hours: 08:00-12:00 London Non deliverable FX forward Avg. ticket size: USD 3-5mn Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: EGP 0.03-0.05 Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: transactions are now recorded electronically on a system which links the primary dealers, CBE and Cairo and Alexandria Stock Exchange (CASE) with the Misr Settlement, Clearing and Central Depository (MCSD). Most trading is OTC with only a few bonds quoted on CASE. A 15%-20% withholding tax (depending on home country tax rate) on Tbills was introduced in May 2008. This only applies to government T-bills issued from May 2008 onwards and does not affect payments on government bonds. Foreign investors face no restrictions on holding T-bills or bonds but often use TRS or CLN for convenience. The market trades Sunday-Thursday. Avg. ticket size: USD 2-5mn Daily turnover: USD 200-300mio Bid/ask spread: T-bills: 20-40bp, T-bonds: 50-100bps Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 71 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Ghana The cedi was introduced in 1965, replacing the sterling as the official currency. It was initially pegged first to sterling and then to the dollar. After a series of devaluations in the 1970s, the cedi was finally pegged at a rate of 2.8 to the dollar in 1980. As a result of high inflation, a parallel black market rate developed in the 1980s, with the government only fully liberalizing the exchange rate in 1990. Since then the cedi has freely floated. On 1st July 2007, the currency was redenominated with 1 new cedi (GHS) worth 10,000 cedi (GHC). The Bank of Ghana’s (BOG) primary policy objective is to ensure price stability – i.e. low inflation and secondarily to support the Government’s economic objectives (higher growth and employment). BOG formally launched its inflation targeting regime in 2007 and has full policy independence. Monetary policy is determined by the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), which consists of seven members – five from the Bank of Ghana and two external members. The MPC has a medium term objective of steering inflation to within 812%. Inflation targets are announced annually and the MPC meets six times per year. The MPC uses the prime rate as the key policy rate to set the stance of monetary policy. Both BOG and Government of Ghana (GOG) issue short term debt securities weekly. USD/GHS exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank USD/GHS and GHS 3M T-bill yield The cedi is fully deliverable and convertible. Deliverable FX forwards are traded offshore, but liquidity is poor. Source: Deutsche Bank Page 72 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Bank of Ghana (BOG) is responsible for both exchange rate and monetary policy (http://www.bog.gov.gh) The cedi is fully deliverable and convertible International investors are prohibited from buying government instruments with maturities less than 1 year GHS products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 0.5-1.5mn Bid/ask spread: GHS 0.005 Avg. daily volume: USD 5-10mn Trading hours: 10:00-14:00 London Deliverable FX forward Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Liquid tenors: <6M Bid/ask spread: GHS 0.005-0.010 Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: Non-residents cannot buy T-bills or government bonds with original maturity below 3 years Avg. ticket size: USD 2mn Bid/ask spread: T-bonds: 50-100bp Offshore GHS products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Avg. ticket size: USD 2-4mn Bid/ask spread: 0.0200 - 0.0400 GHS Ref. source: EMTA approved dealer poll conducted by ICAP (ICAPFIXINGS on BBG) Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 73 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Hungary The forint was introduced in 1946, after the 1945-46 hyperinflation of the pengo. The forint replaced the pengo at the rate of 1 forint = 4×1029 pengo. A crawling band exchange rate regime was introduced in 1995 after high inflation in the mid-1990s. In May 2001 the crawling band was scrapped and replaced by a +/15% band against the Euro with a fixed central parity. The band was scrapped in February 2008 and the forint is now freely floating. The last remaining capital controls were eliminated in June 2001. Hungary joined the EU in 2004 and, therefore, has a commitment to join the Euro at an unspecified future date. In order to enter the Eurozone, all five Maastricht criteria must be met including the commitment to enter ERM-II and maintain EUR/HUF +/-15% around a selected parity rate for at least 2 years. The primary objective of the National Bank of Hungary (NBH) is to achieve and maintain price stability. NBH is also responsible for issuing the forint, controlling cash circulation, setting the Central Bank base rate, publishing official exchange rates and managing the national reserves of foreign currency and gold to influence exchange rates. The NBH has an explicit medium term inflation target of 3%+/-1%. The Monetary Council meets on a monthly basis to set the policy rate. USD/HUF and EUR/HUF exchange rates Source: Deutsche Bank EUR/HUF and HUF 3M implied yields In late 2008 and early 2009 the NBH set up EUR/HUF FX swap operations to provide FX liquidity in the forward market at o/n, 3M and 6M tenors. The forint is both fully deliverable and convertible. Spot is liquid in both USD/HUF and EUR/HUF but due to the strong economic ties between Hungary and the Euroarea, EUR/HUF is viewed as the economically correct way to take a view on the forint. In the spot market, 80% of all trading is in EUR/HUF. EUR/HUF is also the predominant cross in the FX forward and options markets. Source: Deutsche Bank EUR/HUF implied and historical volatility Source: Deutsche Bank Page 74 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The National Bank of Hungary regulates exchange rate policy, and is also responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.mnb.hu). The principal policy rate is the 2-week rate which is set by the NBH at policy meetings. Every Tuesday, the NBH holds a 2-week T-bill auction with the rate set as the policy rate. All bids are accepted. The NBH also has overnight standing facilities at the policy rate +/-1% to regulate any short-term volatility in the forint money markets. Reserve requirements are set at 2% The Hungarian forint is a fully deliverable and convertible currency. HUF products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Bid/ask spread: H UF 0.2 Avg. daily volume: USD 1-2bn Ref. source: ECB fixing <ECB37> FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn (FX forwards); USD 75mn (FX swaps) Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: HUF 0.4-1.4 Avg. daily volume: USD 100-200mn (FX forwards), USD 2-3bn (FX swaps) FX options Avg. ticket size: EUR 20mn Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: 0.5-1.0 vols IRS + FRA Avg. ticket size: USD 5-10k DV01 Liquid tenors: IRS 1Y-10Y and FRAs out to 9X12 Bid/ask spread: 4-6bp Daily volume: 100 – 200m Fixing: 3M BUBOR for 1Y IRS; 6M BUBOR for IRS 2Y+ Ref. source: Reuters page <BUBOR=> Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: T-bills and Bonds trade OTC and on Budapest Stock Exchange (BSE). Bonds are dematerialised bearer securities. Clearing and settlement of trades occur on the Central Clearing House and Depository (KELER). There is no withholding tax on interest paid on Hungarian securities owned by a legal entity. Individuals are charged withholding tax at 20% but this can be reduced or eliminated through double taxation treaties. There are no restrictions on non-resident ownership of Hungarian government bonds and T-bills. Liquid tenors: 4Y-10Y Avg. ticket size: USD 3mn Bid/ask spread: 7-8bps Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 75 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Israel The New Israeli shekel (or sheqel), ILS (or NIS), replaced the old Israeli shekel in 1985 at a rate of 1,000 Israeli shekels per 1 New Israeli shekel. In the 1990s the Bank of Israel (BoI) maintained the shekel in a gradually widening crawling band. In 2005 the band was abolished and the shekel is now freely floating. Foreign exchange controls were gradually reduced through the 1990’s until they were completely abolished at the beginning of 2003, when the currency became fully convertible. After a period of rapid shekel appreciation in early 2008, BoI intervened directly in the FX market between March 2008 and August 2009 with programmed daily purchases of between USD 25mn – 100mn. These regular FX purchases were cancelled in August 2009 and were replaced with ad-hoc, discretionary intervention. . In January 2011, BoI announced new regulatory measures for FX derivative transactions. It published a draft order which imposes a reporting obligation on non-residents and Israeli residents who perform transactions in FX swaps and forwards of more than $10m in one day and on nonresidents who perform transactions in T-Bills and short term government bonds of more than NIS10mn in one day. This was followed by an announcement that the commercial banks will have to meet a 10% reserve requirement for FX swaps and forwards by nonresidents, while the reporting obligation was enlarged in early February by another order requiring that local and foreign banks report their balance of foreign exchange derivatives and the details of contract redemption on a monthly basis March 31st. In March 2010, the House of Representatives (Knesset) passed a new BoI Law, which became effective on June 1, 2010. The new Law defines and ranks the Bank’s objectives as follows: maintaining price stability (an inflation target range of 1-3% over a 12 month horizon), supporting broader goals of the government's economic policy (growth, employment and the reduction of social gaps), and supporting the stability of the financial system. The Bank is led by a Governor, who is also in charge of the Monetary Policy Committee. USD/ILS exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank USD/ILS and 3M ILS implied yields Source: Deutsche Bank USD/ILS implied and historical volatility The shekel is both fully deliverable and convertible. Most activity in the spot and forward markets takes place in USD/ILS, but EUR/ILS also trades. Source: Deutsche Bank Page 76 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Bank of Israel regulates exchange rate policy, and is also responsible for implementing monetary policy; see http://www.bankisrael.gov.il The BoI performs several monetary operations. These include the issuance of Makam (T-bills) with maturities up to 1Y and 1W reverse repo operations where the BoI receives Makam and lends cash to the local banks. As well as these operations the BoI also conducts ad-hoc liquidity providing and reducing operations through daily and weekly loan and deposit auctions. The policy rate is set as the lower bound of interest rates at the loan auctions and the upper bound on interest rates at the deposit auctions. The BoI maintain standing facilities at +/-0.5% around the policy rate. The Israeli shekel is a fully deliverable and convertible currency. ILS transactions can be settled in CLS. ILS products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 15mn Bid/ask spread: ILS 0.0015 Avg. daily volume: USD 1.2 -1.5bn Ref. source: Bank of Israel <BOIT12> Trading hours: 06:00-16:00 London Onshore FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn (FX swaps) Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: 1m-3m 0.0004 ILS, 6m-1y 0.0010 ILS Avg. daily volume: $500m (for maturities up to 1Y) Offshore FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn (FX swaps) Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: 1m-3m 0.0005 ILS 6m 0.0010 ILS, 9m-1y 0.0015 Avg. daily volume: $300m (for all maturities up to 1Y) FX options Avg. ticket size: USD 30mn Liquid tenors: up to 1Y Bid/ask spread: 1 vol IRS + FRA Avg. ticket size: USD 10k DV01 Bid/ask spread: 2-3bp Fixing: 3M TELBOR Ref. source: Reuters page <TELBOR=> Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: Nominal bonds (ticker ILGOV, SHAHAR) and CPI-linkers (ticker ILCPI, GALIL). Government T-bills (ILTBIL) central bank T-bills (MAKAM) also trade. Non-residents pay no withholding tax on nominal and CPI bonds but pay 15% withholding tax on Makam and Tbills, which can be reduced using double tax Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 77 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies treaties. Bonds are traded Sunday-Thursday on Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE) and can be traded on the primary dealer’s trading system and any other authorized platform. Bond prices are quoted with accrued interest (dirty). CPI-linked bond prices are quoted both dirty and nominal (after the inflation adjustment). Bonds are not Euroclearable; the Tel Aviv Clearing House handles both on- and offexchange clearing and settlement for bonds. Liquid tenors: 1Y-10Y Avg. ticket size: USD 5-10mn Bid/ask spread: 1bp Ref. source: Page 78 Reuters Page <0#ILSAHR=TA> Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Kazakhstan The tenge is the monetary unit of Kazakhstan, introduced in November 1993 to replace the ruble at a rate of 1 tenge = 500 rubles. A floating exchange rate regime was introduced in April 1999. However, the tenge remains a managed float and there has been limited flexibility against the dollar or ruble in recent years. In February 2009 the National Bank of Kazakhstan (NBK) allowed the tenge to devalue by 15% against the dollar to a parity rate of 150 within a +/-3% trading band (145 --155). In February 2010, however, NBK widened the trading band to +15/-22.5 within parity (127.5 – 165). In January 2011, NBK declared that it would abandon the exchange rate band and promote a transition to a managed float of the tenge. The NBK is accountable to the Kazakh President, but within the limits of authority granted by the legislation, is independent in its activity. Its primary objective is to ensure price stability, i.e. keeping inflation within the Bank’s defined range of 6-8%. This is done through setting the official refinancing rate which depends on the state of the money market, demand and supply for loans, level of inflation and inflation expectation. USD/KZT exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank USD/KZT and 3M KZT implied yield There are no requirements for foreign investors to obtain authorization to invest, but a tax registration number is required for anyone opening a cash account in Kazakhstan. Income and capital can be freely repatriated from Kazakhstan. The tenge is convertible and there are few restrictions placed on the import and export of foreign currency and payment instruments to and from Kazakhstan. Both residents and non-residents may open foreign currency and tenge accounts at Kazakhstan banks, which can be used for personal and business needs. Most international bank payments and transfers between residents and non-residents are executed without restriction. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Source: Deutsche Bank Page 79 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The National Bank of Kazakhstan regulates exchange rate policy and is responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.nationalbank.kz). The official USD/KZT rate is determined on the basis of foreign exchange auctions (for USD, EUR and RUB) that are held daily. KZT trades both OTC and on the stock exchange (KASE). The NBK sets a 1W refinancing, or repo, rate and a 1W deposit rate. The deposit rate is set at half the level of the repo rate. The main policy operation is a 1W repo into which the banks can tender government and agency securities as collateral. In August 2007 the NBK introduced 7-day refinancing loans secured against the balance of bank correspondent accounts at the NBK. The NBK also uses currency swaps to provide FX liquidity to local banks and has issued its own NBK notes to manage liquidity. There are no requirements for foreign investors to obtain authorization to invest but a tax registration number is required for anyone opening a cash account in Kazakhstan. Income and capital can be freely repatriated from Kazakhstan. The tenge is convertible and there are few restrictions placed on the import and export of foreign currency and payment instruments to and from Kazakhstan. Both residents and non-residents may open foreign currency and tenge accounts at Kazakhstan banks, which can be used for personal and business needs. Most international bank payments and transfers between residents and non-residents are executed without restriction. A non-deliverable market also exists in USD/KZT, though liquidity is more limited. Onshore KZT products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: KZT 0.05 Avg. daily volume: USD 200-300mn Ref. source: Reuters Page <AFINEX02> Trading hours: 10:15-18:00 London Deliverable Forward (NDF) Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: KZT 0.1 – 0.2 Avg. daily volume: USD 20mn Offshore KZT products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: KZT 0.1 – 0.2 Tenor: <1Y (low liquidity up to 5Y) Avg. daily volume: USD 100mn Page 80 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Kuwait The Kuwaiti dinar was introduced in 1961 under the Kuwait Currency Board which had the authority to issue notes and coins. The Central Bank of Kuwait (CBK) was established in 1969 with a wider role in setting monetary policy. From March 1975 – January 2003 Kuwait fixed its exchange rate to an undisclosed currency basket which was estimated to be heavily weighted in USD. Kuwait changed its exchange rate regime to a +/-3.5% band around a central USD parity (0.29963/USD) in January 2003 as other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries moved their SDR pegs to official USD pegs in the run up to the proposed GCC common currency in 2010. In May 2007, the country reverted back to a peg against an undisclosed currency basket against a backdrop of broad-based USD weakness and rising inflation. Our estimate for basket composition is 75% USD, 16% EUR, 5% JPY, 4% GBP. Despite having a different exchange rate regime from the rest of the GCC Kuwait remains committed to the proposed GCC common currency. USD/KWD spot USD/KWD USD/KWD 0.30 0.29 0.28 0.27 0.26 Jan 08 Jan 09 Jan 10 Jan 11 Jan 12 Source: Deutsche Bank USD/KWD and KWD 3M implied yield CBK's principle activity is to issue the Kuwaiti Dinar on behalf of the State of Kuwait. It is also mandated with assisting the growth of the national income and controlling the banking system in the country. The dinar is fully deliverable and convertible. Source: Deutsche Bank Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 81 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Central Bank of Kuwait regulates exchange rate policy and is responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.cbk.gov.kw). The dinar is a fully deliverable, fully convertible currency KWD products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 5-10mn Bid/ask spread: KWD 0.0001-0.0002 Avg. daily volume: USD 100-200m Ref. source: Central Bank of Kuwait <CBKK> Trading hours: 07:30-15:00 London FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 25mn (FX forwards); USD 25mn (FX swaps) Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: KWD 0.0001 (1Y) Avg. daily volume: USD 100-200m Ref. source: <DBMEFWD> Page 82 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Latvia The lat replaced the Latvian ruble at par in 1993, three years after the country regained independence from the Soviet Union. FX was viewed as a key component of broader stabilisation initiatives aimed at liberalising the economy and easing many restrictions. To foster price stability, the currency was pegged to the IMFs Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) in 1994, where it traded in a +/-1% band for a decade. It was then re-pegged to the euro at the start of 2005, and four months later Latvia entered ERM-II at a level of 0.702804, maintaining the previous +/-1% band. Nevertheless, from the perspective of ERM-II, the standard fluctuation limits of +/-15% apply. Latvia joined the EU in 2004 and therefore has a commitment to join the Euro at an unspecified future date. In order to enter the Eurozone, all five Maastricht criteria must be met including the commitment to enter ERM-II and maintain EUR/LVL +/-15% around a selected “parity” rate for at least 2 years. EUR/LVL exchange rate and +/-1% BoL band Source: Deutsche Bank EUR/LVL and LVL T-bill yields The main objective of the Bank of Latvia (BoL) is to maintain price stability, but it does not have an explicit inflation target. Instead, the central bank targets exchange rate stability. The Council of the Bank of Latvia consists of seven people. The Council passes decisions on behalf of the Bank. The six member Board is accountable to the Council, and holds responsibility for all departments within the Bank - ranging from Monetary Policy to internal accounting. The FX regime is essentially a currency board, where the central bank undertakes to buy or sell unlimited amounts of euros to banks on their request at the basket’s limits. The Bank of Latvia also holds a daily EUR/LVL FX swap operation to provide LVL liquidity to a maximum size of LVL 10mn per day. Source: Deutsche Bank The lat is a fully deliverable and convertible currency. Latvia has established one of the most liberal foreign exchange and capital movement regimes in the world. Both foreign currency and the lats can freely enter and leave the country; accounts can be opened in lats and foreign currencies without any restrictions, and lats can be purchased and sold freely in exchange for foreign currencies. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 83 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The principal objective of the Bank of Latvia is to regulate currency in circulation by implementing monetary policy to maintain price stability. For more details, see http://www.bank.lv/eng/main/all/ The principal monetary instrument of the Bank of Latvia is the main refinancing operation, a daily LVL 1W repo auction. The refinancing rate is the minimum rate at this auction. The Bank of Latvia also maintains an overnight marginal deposit rate and three overnight marginal lending rates. The lat is fully deliverable and convertible LVL products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 1-2mn Bid/ask spread: LVL 0.001-0.002 Avg. daily volume: USD 30mn Ref. source: ECB fixing <ECB37> Trading hours: 07:00 – 15:30 GMT FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 1-2mn Tenors: <12M Bid/ask spread: LVL 0.005-0.02 Page 84 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Nigeria The Nigerian naira was introduced in 1973, replacing the pound at a fixed rate of 2 naira to the pound. Although the naira has gone through multiple regime changes over the years it is at present classified as a managed float. Nigeria suffers from the unique situation that the government is the main recipient, and therefore supplier, of foreign exchange in the economy, through oil-related taxes and revenues of the NNPC. Meanwhile, the bulk of the private sector has a continuous shortage of FX for imports and other foreign exchange payments. To correct this imbalance the central bank sells FX to the market. Changes implemented in 2006, including the introduction of a Wholesale Dutch Auction System (WDAS), have enhanced the CBN’s control over liquidity and inflation, and resulted in the effective unification of the 4 different exchange rate markets (the retail market for non-financial traders and investors, the interbank market, the bureau de change market BdC and the curb market). The amount of foreign currency is regulated through twice-weekly auctions, and effectively the CBN continue to set the exchange rate by varying the amounts of FX it sells to the banks and exchange bureaus and by periodically intervening in the interbank market. Following a period of stability between April 2008 and December 2008 the naira depreciated sharply in Dec/Jan 2009, after which CBN introduced a number of temporary exchange rate restrictions and temporarily replaced the WDAS with a retail Dutch auction system. In February 2009 CBN announced its commitment to manage the exchange rate within a band of +/-3 percent around the official rate at the time (N145.85). Exchange restrictions were progressively eased beginning in May 2009 culminating in the restoration of the WDAS in July 2009. Only authorized dealers are allowed to buy and sell FX with the CBN. An interbank market for FX (IBEM) sets the market rate for the naira. USD/NGN exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank NGN 182D T-bill yield Source: Deutsche Bank In March 2011, CBN started FX forward transactions with authorised local dealers. CBN listed three main aims: enhance effectiveness of monetary policy, to increase efficiency in the FX market and to allow smoothing out of FX demand. However, market activity in onshore FX forwards is currently very limited. In addition, an illiquid NDF market exists. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 85 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The government is the main recipient, and, therefore, supplier of foreign exchange in the economy, through oil related taxes and revenues of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation. Certificate of Currency Importation (CCI) is required for foreign investors to buy FX. These are issued when FX is imported into Nigeria. The central bank uses a monetary targeting regime. Under this regime, it uses policy instruments to influence its targets, the reserve and broad money aggregates; the ultimate goal of its interventions is to keep inflation in single digits. A central component of policy is the interest rate corridor around the monetary policy rate (MPR). The central bank intervenes in the money market through the interest rate corridor, where the rate on a standing lending facility constitutes the ceiling and the rate on the standing deposit facility is the floor. The MPR is the midpoint between these rates. By adjusting this corridor, the central bank seeks to influence interest rates in the interbank market and thus the willingness of banks to hold naira. Open market operations and reserve requirements are also used to help manage liquidity. Each week the central bank auctions treasury bills and, less frequently, federal government bonds. A repurchase (repo) market complements open market operations. The central bank also modifies bank reserve requirements to influence liquidity. Current details can be found at http://www.cenbank.org/default.asp Onshore NGN products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 3-5mn Bid/ask spread: NGN 0.30-0.50 Avg. daily volume: USD 200mn Ref. source: Reuters page <NGNFIX=> Trading hours: 08:00-16:00 GMT Government T-bills and bonds Avg. daily volume USD 25-175mn (1-year lock up for T-bills was removed in July 2011, there are no lock ups currently in place) Avg. ticket size: USD 3-5mn Bid/ask spread: 3 0-50bp (Tbills), 5-15bp (bonds) Offshore NGN products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Avg. ticket size: USD 3-5mn Bid/ask spread: NGN 0.40-1.00 Ref. source: Reuters page <NIFEX01>, BBG page: NGN FMDA <CRNCY> Page 86 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Poland The new Polish zloty was introduced on 1st January 1995. Initially, the zloty was managed under a crawling band exchange regime, linked to a basket of five currencies. During the 1990s the width of the zloty trading band was progressively widened from 2% to 15%. From 1st January 1999, the zloty switched to a basket of EUR 55% and USD 45%. On 12th April 2000 the band was abandoned and the zloty freely floated. The last remaining capital controls were removed in October 2002. Poland joined the EU in 2004 and therefore has a commitment to join the Euro at an unspecified future date. In order to enter the Eurozone, all five Maastricht criteria must be met including the commitment to enter ERM-II and maintain EUR/PLN +/-15% around a selected “parity” rate for at least 2 years. Although NBP operates its monetary policy under a floating exchange rate regime, it reserves the right to intervene directly in the FX market should this prove necessary to achieve the inflation target. USD/PLN and EUR/PLN exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank EUR/PLN and 3M PLN implied yields The basic objective of NBP monetary policy is maintaining price stability. Since 1999, NBP has followed an inflation targeting strategy and in 2004 adopted a continuous target of 2.5% with a permissible fluctuation band of +/-1%. The Bank is led by a President and eight other management board members. The Monetary Policy Council (MPC), a directing body of the NBP, is responsible for setting interest rates in Poland. It is led by the President of the NBP and has nine other council members. The zloty is now both fully deliverable and convertible. EUR/PLN has taken over from USD/PLN as the dominant pair, and it now accounts for 90% of transactions in the FX market. EUR/PLN implied and historical volatility Source: Deutsche Bank Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 87 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory Framework and Approach The National Bank of Poland regulates exchange rate policy and is also responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.nbp.pl). The key policy rate of the NBP is the 7-day reference rate. The MPC also sets the Lombard rate (150bp above the reference rate), the rediscount rate (25bp above) and the NBP deposit rate (150bp below the reference rate). The NBP uses a combination of open market operations, reserve requirements and credit deposit operations to influence short-term market rates. The NBP conducts open market operations through the issuance of 7-day T-bills on Fridays; the minimum yield is set at the reference rate. The Lombard and deposit rates are respectively the maximum cost of securing funds from the NBP and the interest rate on deposits at the NBP; they, therefore, set the ceiling and floor for overnight market rates. Reserve requirements have been set at 3.5% since 2003 and are remunerated. The Polish zloty is a fully accessible, fully convertible currency. PLN products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Bid/ask spread: PLN 0.001 Avg. daily volume: USD 3bn Ref. source: ECB fixing <ECB37> FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn (FX forwards); USD 50mn (FX swap up to 3M), USD 30mn (up to 1Y) Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: PLN 0.002 - 0.008 Avg. daily volume: USD 0.2bn (FX forwards), USD 3.5bn (FX swaps) FX options Avg. ticket size: EUR 30mn Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: 0.5 - 1.0 vol IRS + FRA Avg. ticket size: USD 10k DV01 Liquid tenors: 1 - 10Y Bid/ask spread: 2 - 3bps Fixing: 3M WIBOR for FRA and 1Y; 6M WIBOR for IRS 2Y+ Ref. source: <WIBOR=> Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: There are no limits on foreign investment in Polish government t-bills and bonds. Custody and settlement of bonds and T-bills are managed locally through the National Depository for Securities (KDPW). There is a withholding tax of 10% on interest payments. This can be reduced or eliminated through double-taxation treaties. Liquid tenors: 1 - 10Y Avg. ticket size: USD 5 - 10mn Bid/ask spread: 2 - 3bps Page 88 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Qatar The Qatari riyal was introduced in 1966, replacing the Indian rupee. The currency was initially used by both Qatar and Dubai until Dubai entered UAE in 1973. In 1975, the riyal was pegged to the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), but effectively the currency has been fixed to the dollar at 3.64 since 1980. The peg to the dollar was formalised in 2001. Qatar is a member of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and remains committed to a common currency. USD/QAR exchange rate The Qatar Central Bank (QCB) conducts exchange rate policy with the aim of retaining the stability and the free convertibility of the QAR. Monetary policy is determined by the Monetary Policy Committee and is implemented with a view to supporting the dollar peg. The QCB is led by a board of five directors. Source: Deutsche Bank Commercial banks trade USD/QAR at the QCB rate of 3.64, but add a 0.24% margin on trades with the public. The riyal is fully deliverable and convertible. USD/QAR and 3M QAR FX-implied yields Source: Deutsche Bank Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 89 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory Framework and Approach The Qatar Central Bank regulates exchange rate policy and is responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.qcb.gov.qa). The riyal is a fully deliverable, fully convertible currency. QAR products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 25 -50 mn Bid/ask spread: QAR 0.0003 – 0.0005 Avg. daily volume: USD 500mn Ref. source: QAR=DBBL Trading hours: 07:30-15:00 London FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn (FX forwards); USD 50mn (FX swaps) Liquid tenors: <3Y Bid/ask spread: QAR 0.0005-0.0010 Avg. daily volume: USD 500mn Ref. source: <DBMEFWD> Page 90 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Romania The leu was introduced in 1867. From 1994 to 1997 the leu was freely-floating before becoming a managed float against USD and baskets of EUR and USD. At the end of October 2004, the National Bank of Romania (NBR) abandoned the basket and moved to a more flexible exchange rate. On 1st July 2005 the leu was redenominated, with the old ROL being converted to RON at a rate of 1 RON = 10,000 ROL. On 1st September 2006, the NBR eliminated the remaining capital controls and completed the liberalisation of the capital account. Romania joined the EU in 2007 and therefore has a commitment to join the Euro at an unspecified future date. In order to enter the Eurozone, all five Maastricht criteria must be met including the commitment to enter ERM-II and maintain EUR/RON +/-15% around a selected “parity” rate for at least 2 years. The NBR is run by the Board of Directors, which consists of nine members and is led by a Governor. The NBR moved to direct inflation targeting in 2005. Annual inflation targets are set in discussion with the government. The inflation target for 2012 is 3% with a +/-1% variation band. The target for 2013 is 2.5% with a +/- 1% variation band. EUR/RON and USD/RON exchange rates Source: Deutsche Bank. We use ROL/10000 up to Jul-05 EUR/RON and RON 3M implied yield The exchange rate regime of the leu currently in place is that of a managed float, in line with using inflation targets as a nominal anchor for monetary policy. The leu is both fully deliverable and convertible. Spot is liquid in both USD/RON and EUR/RON but EUR/RON is viewed as the economically correct way to take a view on the leu. Source: Deutsche Bank EUR/RON implied and historical volatility Source: Deutsche Bank Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 91 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The National Bank of Romania regulates exchange rate policy and is responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.nbr.ro) The official policy rate is the rate on one-week NBR open market operations. One-week deposit or repo auctions take place at this rate on an ad-hoc basis when the NBR determine that the money market is over- or under-liquid. The NBR also has standing deposit and lending facilities at the policy rate +/-4%. In the past, the NBR has auctioned 3M certificates of deposit to reduce RON liquidity The Romanian leu is a fully accessible, fully convertible currency, though a non-deliverable market also exists. Liquidity was shifting from the NDF to the deliverable market even before full liberalisation of the country’s capital account. We estimate that 80% of the daily turnover in RON today is concentrated in the onshore, deliverable market Onshore RON products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Bid/ask spread: RON 0.005 Avg. daily volume: USD 400m Ref. source: ECB fixing <ECB37> Trading hours: 8:00-14:00 London FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn (FX forwards); USD 10mn (FX swaps up to 1M), USD 5mn (FX swaps up to 3M) Liquid tenors: <6M (but quoted up to 1Y) Bid/ask spread: RON 0.005-0.02 Avg. daily volume: USD 500mn Cross Currency Swaps Avg. ticket size: 2-5k DV01 Liquid tenors: 1-5Y Bid/ask spread: 5-10bps Fixing page: 3M EURIBOR Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: The NBR is responsible for the issuance, registration, transfer and settlement of government securities. Government securities are held in custody accounts at the NBR. The government licenses primary and secondary market dealers to issue to and trade with investors OTC. A withholding tax of 16% is levied on interest payments; this can be reduced or eliminated through double-taxation treaties. Avg. ticket size: USD 2-3mn Bid/ask spread: 10bp Page 92 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Russia Russia formally operates a managed floating exchange rate regime. The Central Bank of Russia (CBR) sets the official exchange rates against the ruble daily and intervenes in the inter-bank market to maintain a stable ruble exchange rate. The ruble was managed against the USD until Feb 2005 when the CBR switched to a basket composed of EUR 10cts and USD 90cts. Since then, the weight of the euro in the basket has progressively increased to the current EUR 45cts and USD 55cts. Russia imposes a ceiling on the allowable amount of ruble REER appreciation, limiting the flexibility of the nominal ruble exchange rate. Flexibility in the basket exchange rate has increased progressively since mid-2008. The medium term aim is to move to a more flexible regime in support of its other medium term aim: inflation targeting. Monetary policy decisions are taken by the CBR board of directors, consisting of eleven directors and a Chairman. The members of the board meet at least once a month; however, their decisions are supervised by the National Banking Council which comprises eleven members and a Chairman. The CBR targets both inflation and exchange rate and sets several market interest rates. The ruble is fully deliverable and convertible. Prior to the 1998 crisis, NDFs were actively traded both onshore and offshore but the NDF market is now mostly offshore. NDFs are usually quoted outright and in USD/RUB. An EMTA fixing rate is used as a reference to cash-settle contracts. Interest-bearing deposit accounts may also be opened, as was the case before the liberalisation of the capital account (July 2006), effectively allowing for the participation of nonresidents in the deliverable FX market. RUB basket forwards and options are also available but the market is less liquid than USD/RUB. USD/RUB and RUB basket exchange rates Source: Deutsche Bank USD/RUB and RUB 3M implied yield Source: Deutsche Bank USD/RUB implied and historical volatility Source: Deutsche Bank Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 93 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Central Bank of Russia regulates exchange rate policy, and is also responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.cbr.ru). The most important is the overnight repo rate but the CBR also set tom-next and 1W deposit rates and the overnight refinancing rate. Changes in reserve requirements are also used to tighten or loosen monetary policy. When liquidity conditions are tight, the CBR conducts daily overnight repo auctions with the minimum rate set as the repo rate. The CBR can conduct two or three overnight repo operations per day with the minimum rate increasing 25bp each time. The CBR also issues short-tenor (3M-6M) Bank of Russia bonds. Since April 2008 the Ministry of Finance has also auctioned surplus budget funds to the banks and the CBR now also provide uncollateralized ruble loans to a select pool of local banks The Russian ruble is a fully accessible, fully convertible currency. Both deliverable and non-deliverable FX markets exist, but liquidity is concentrated in the latter due to a rather conservative credit risk policy set by local banks pertaining to settlement and delivery risks in RUB. The deliverable trading has grown significantly due to increased interest coming from, inter alia, the banking sector and large European corporations. (M&A activity etc) Onshore RUB products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 10-20mn Bid/ask spread: RUB 0.01 - 0.02 Avg. daily volume: USD 7-10bn Ref. source: EMTA fixing for NDF <RUBMCMEEMTA=>; backup fixing is EMTA RUB Indicative Survey Rate; www.emta.org Trading hours: 7:00-15:00 London FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 50-100mn Liquid tenors: <12M Bid/ask spread: RUB 0.002-0.01 Ref. source: Reuters Page <DBMP> Cross-currency swaps Avg. ticket size: USD 10-25k DV01 Liquid tenors: 1Y - 7Y Bid/ask spread: 4 - 8bp Fixing: USD 3M LIBOR Ref. source: Reuters Page <DBMP> IRS Avg ticket size: USD 10-20k DV01 Liquid tenors: 1Y - 5Y Bid/ask spread: 5-8bp Fixing: 3M MOSPRIME Ref. source: Reuters Pages <DBMP>, <MOSPRIME=> Page 94 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Government bond Regulatory: Government bonds are fully euroclearable now, so one can trade both on MICEX and OTC with e/c settlement. Foreigners don’t pay any taxes, only locals. Avg. ticket size: USD 5-10mn Bid/ask spread: 5-10bp Ref. source: Micex Reuters <0#RUTSY=MM> Offshore RUB products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn Liquid tenors: <2Y Bid/ask spread: RUB 0.01 - 0.04 Avg. daily volume: USD 500mn Ref. source: Reuters page <DBMP> Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Liquid tenors: <1Y Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: 0.5 – 1.0 vol Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 95 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Saudi Arabia The Saudi Arabian riyal (SAR) was introduced in 1961, replacing Saudi silver coins and foreign currencies. Until 1986 the currency displayed some flexibility with the SAR initially appreciating after the first oil price spike in the mid-1970s. The currency weakened steadily through the early 1980s until being pegged to the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) in 1986. In practice, the SAR has been a de-facto peg to the USD at a rate of 3.75/USD. The peg to the USD was formalised in early 2003 to make official the GCC pegs to the USD in the run-up to the proposed GCC common currency. Only very recently has the riyal been allowed to deviate from the strict 3.75/USD rate, although the official peg remains unchanged. The Saudi Arabia Monetary Agency‘s (SAMA) primary objective is to maintain stability in price levels through monitoring of exchange rates. SAMA’s second objective is to maintain stability in the broader financial sector. USD/SAR exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank USD/SAR and SAR 3M implied yields The riyal is fully deliverable and convertible. It is backed by gold and other foreign currencies. The predominant cross is USD/SAR, but EUR and GBP crosses also trade regularly. Options are quoted on USD/SAR. Source: Deutsche Bank Page 96 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency regulates exchange rate policy, and is also responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.sama.gov.sa). SAMA has two policy rates, the official repo rate and the reverse repo rates. Banks can tender government T-bills to the repo in exchange for SAR funding. SAMA also uses changes in reserve requirements to tighten or loosen credit conditions. The Saudi Riyal is a fully deliverable and convertible currency. Onshore SAR products FX spot market Avg. ticket size: USD 25 - 100mn Bid/ask spread: SAR 0.0001 Avg. daily volume: USD 1.5bn Ref. source: Reuters Page <SAMA01> Trading hours: 7:30-15:00 London FX forwards/swaps Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn (FX forwards); USD 50mn (FX swaps) Liquid tenors: <5Y Bid/ask spread: 0.0003 (1y forwards) Avg. daily volume: USD 1.5-3.0bn Ref. source: Reuters Page <DBMEFWD> FX options Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: 1.5 vol IRS market Avg ticket size: USD 10-15k DV01 Bid/ask spread: 5-6bps 5Y Fixing: 3M SAIBOR Ref source: <SAIBOR=> Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 97 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies South Africa The rand was first introduced in 1961, coinciding with the establishment of the Republic of South Africa. It replaced the South African pound as the legal tender. Since 1995, after the abolition of the financial rand and capital controls for non-residents, the rand has been freely floating. The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) has, in the past, intervened in the market to accumulate foreign exchange reserves, but these have rarely had an immediate effect on the level of the currency. South Africa has followed a strategy of progressively easing exchange controls on capital transactions since 1994. With the abolition of the financial rand in 1995, all exchange controls on non-residents were eliminated. However, only fully registered dealers are allowed to conduct foreign exchange transactions. Non-residents are free to purchase shares, bonds and other assets without restriction and to repatriate dividends, interest receipts, and current and capital profits, as well as the original investment capital. There are residual controls on the actions of residents, but these mostly refer to the lending of rand. USD/ZAR exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank USD/ZAR and ZAR 3M implied yield historical The SARB regards its primary goal in the economic system as "the achievement and maintenance of price stability". The Bank has an inflation target of between 3% - 6%. The Bank transmits its interest-rate policy to the market by providing refinancing to banks at its repurchase rate, which is determined by its Monetary Policy Committee (MPC). The MPC comprises of six members, including the Governor. In August 2010 the Bank changed its monetary policy implementation framework. Two main changes were announced. Firstly, the Bank introduced measures aimed at streamlining the monetary policy operations by announcing the daily average of the estimated weekly liquidity requirement. In addition, the Bank’s refinancing operation only accepts Government and SARB denominated debt as eligible collateral. Source: Deutsche Bank USD/ZAR implied and historical volatility The rand is a fully deliverable and convertible currency. Source: Deutsche Bank Page 98 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The South African Reserve Bank regulates exchange rate policy and is responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.reservebank.co.za). The official policy rate is the 7-day repo rate. To ensure that the repo rate is effective, the SARB drains liquidity from the market in order to compel the banks to borrow from the SARB at the repo rate. The SARB drain liquidity using the issuance of SARB debentures, long-term reverse repos and FX swaps. Repo and SARB debenture auctions are conducted on a Wednesday. Long-term-reverse repo operations are conducted on Mondays. The SARB also holds supplementary 1-day (reverse-) repo tenders at the repo rate and has a standing facility at the repo rate +/-50bp. The statutory reserve requirement is set at 2.5%. The South African rand is a fully accessible, fully convertible currency for non-resident investors. There are residual controls on the actions of residents, but these mostly refer to the lending of rand. ZAR transactions can be settled in CLS. Onshore ZAR products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: ZAR 25 pips Avg. daily volume: USD 6bn Ref. source: Reuters Page <ZAR=> FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn (FX forwards); USD 100mn (FX swaps up to 1Y) Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: ZAR 0.03 - 0.05 Avg. daily volume: USD 1bn (FX forwards); USD 9bn (FX swaps) FX options Avg. ticket size: USD 30mn Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: 1.0 – 2.0 vols IRS + FRA Avg. ticket size: USD 8k DV01 Liquid tenors: 1 - 30Y IRS; to 21X24 FRA Bid/ask spread: 3 - 4 bps Fixing: 3M JIBAR Ref. source: Reuters Page <DBMM> Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: Spot bonds are exchange-traded. In 1996, control of the market passed from the JSE to the Bond Exchange of South Africa (BESA). Currently more than 375 government and corporate bonds are listed on BESA. Bond settlement and custody are managed locally at the Central Securities Depository. There are no restrictions on non-resident ownership of South African government bonds or T-bills. Liquid tenors: 2Y - 30Y Avg. ticket size: USD 20-50mn Bid/ask spread: 2 - 3bps Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 99 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Turkey The Turkish lira (TRL) was first introduced in 1844. After persistently high inflation from the 1970s to the 1990s, the lira was replaced by the Yeni Turkish Lira (TRY) on 1st January 2005 at a rate of 1 TRY = 1,000,000 TRL. A disinflation program was launched in 1998 along with a floating of the lira, but its lack of success led to the introduction of a crawling peg regime against a reference basket of USD and EUR in 1999. The peg was abandoned during the 2001 crisis and the lira is now a fully floating currency with no target levels. The primary objective of the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) is price stability. Furthermore, as long as not in conflict with the price stability objective, the CBRT also supports the growth and employment policies of the government. The CBRT adopted inflation targeting in 2002. The target for 2012 and 2013 is 5% (+/- 2%). The CBRT is organised as follows: the Bank is led by a board, which consists of a Governor and six members. The Board oversees the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), which consists of seven members, and is led by the Governor of the Central Bank. USD/TRY exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank USD/TRY and TRY 3M implied yields The CBRT periodically purchase FX through daily auctions, with the aim of building up reserves. These have a minimum daily purchase amount and an optional further amount, which can be used at the discretion of the local banks. Recently, the CBRT have also sold FX at auctions with the aim of supporting the lira. At times of severe market stress the CBRT directly intervene by selling USD to the market. The lira is fully convertible and deliverable. Spot is generally quoted in USD/TRY, but EUR/TRY is regularly traded and other crosses such as TRY/ZAR and TRY/ILS are also quoted and traded. Source: Deutsche Bank USD/TRY implied and historical volatility Source: Deutsche Bank Page 100 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Central Bank of Turkey regulates exchange rate policy and is responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.tcmb.gov.tr). The official policy rate is the overnight borrowing rate. The CBRT also sets an overnight lending rate which is 250bp over the borrowing rate. The CBRT manages lira liquidity using repo and reverse repo operations. The CBRT set reserve requirements for banks in both local and foreign currency. The Turkish lira is a fully deliverable and convertible currency. TRY products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 5bn Bid/ask spread: TRY 0.005 Avg. daily volume: USD 7 - 8bn Ref. source: Reuters Page <CBTA> FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 25mn (FX forwards); USD 100mn (FX swaps up to 1M), USD 10mn (swaps up to 2Y) Liquid tenors: <2Y Bid/ask spread: 3 - 10bps Avg. daily volume: USD 2.2bn Ref. source: Reuters Page <DBTRBNK> FX options Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn Liquid tenors: <2Y Bid/ask spread: 1.0 – 2.0 vol Cross-currency swaps Avg. ticket size: USD 10k DV01 Bid/ask spread: 5-6bp Fixing page: USD 3M LIBOR IRS market Avg. ticket size: USD 10k DV01 Bid/ask spread: 20bp Fixing: 3M TRYIBOR Ref source: Reuters Page <TRYIBOR> Government T-bills and bonds Regulatory: Settlement and clearing are provided by Takasbank. All custodian banks have accounts at Takasbank. T-bills and bonds are traded both OTC and on the ISE. Settlement conventions depend on the time of trade execution; trades before midday are settled T+0 and trades after midday are settled T+1. Bonds are quoted by clean price and CPI-linkers are quoted clean and real. T-bills are quoted on a simple yield basis. Any withholding taxes only apply to securities issued before 2006. There are no restrictions on foreign ownership of Turkish government debt. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 101 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Liquid tenors: 1Y, 2Y, 5Y, 10Y Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: 2-5bp (T-bills); 5-8bp (T-bonds) Ref. source: Reuters Page <DBTRBNK>, Bloomberg page <DBTR> Page 102 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Ukraine The hryvnia was re-established as the currency of Ukraine in 1996. Following a succession of exchange rate bands, starting in 1999 the exchange rate was allowed to be determined by the interbank FX market. In February 2000, NBU announced its intention to let the currency float freely, but due to regular intervention limiting the movement in the currency, the exchange rate was reclassified in 2001 (by the IMF) and through March-08 the official USD/UAH exchange rate stood at 5.05 (within a 4.95-5.20 band). Increasing flexibility was introduced in the spring of 2008 to allow the currency to appreciate—initially to allow for some appreciation but subsequently to allow the currency to depreciate. Under its stand-by arrangement with the IMF (approved 5th November 2008) Ukraine has agreed to follow a flexible currency regime without preannounced targets, but currently the exchange rate arrangement is a managed float. USD/UAH exchange rate Source: Deutsche Bank The authorities have taken some measures to improve the functioning of the FX market but continue to resort to administrative controls to curtail currency movements. The official exchange rate has been aligned with the market rate of the previous day (within a 2% margin) and the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) continues FX auctions, which are aimed at facilitating the repayment of external debt by households and SMEs. In November 2009 the President signed an anticrisis law (No.1533-VI) which aims to stabilise the local currency and banking system. In addition, in July 2010, the IMF approved a 29-month, US$15.5bn stand-by agreement for Ukraine in support of government reforms and institutional changes. Specifically, the government aims to develop a more robust monetary policy framework focused on domestic price stability under a flexible exchange rate regime. However, in 2011, these stand-by agreements were delayed due to the country’s failure to comply with the Fund’s conditions. Currently, all deliverable FX trades are conducted solely in the OTC interbank market. Banks are allowed to run open positions, although intraday speculative positions are still restricted. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 103 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach According to the constitution of Ukraine, the main function of the NBU is to ensure the stability of the hryvnia, fostering stability in the banking system and, within its competence, price stability. For more details, see http://www.bank.gov.ua/ENGL/default.htm Ukraine has significant restrictions on capital account flows, summarized in great detail in the IMF’s report on Exchange Arrangements and Exchange Restrictions. Exporters are required to repatriate all proceeds through domestic commercial banks within 90 days and the NBU has the authority to impose surrender requirements. The Pension Fund Duty levied on the purchase of foreign exchange was lowered in January 2008 from 1% to 0.5%. A non-resident bank without a legal presence in the country may only open an investment, deposit, or correspondent account with a local bank. A hryvnia investment account is required for investment in domestic instruments. For foreign entities, a non-resident bank may not engage in onshore forwards transactions in Ukraine. The NBU uses a range of instruments to control UAH liquidity and monetary policy. These are termed refinancing operations (to provide liquidity) and mobilization operations (to absorb liquidity). This includes setting the discount rate and the overnight secured and unsecured lending rates. The NBU absorb liquidity from banks through the issuance of deposit certificates for which the NBU sets the maximum permitted interest rate at auction. In November 2011, the NBU announced introduction of a new instrument called “own certificate of deposit “for individuals. The NBU plans to issue certificates of deposit for individuals in exchange for cash funds. The aim is to raise temporarily free household cash funds, thereby reducing the volume of cash outside banks, which is intended to reduce pressure on the hryvnia exchange rate, inflation developments and promote monetary stability. Onshore UAH products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 2-3mn Bid/ask spread: UAH 0.1 Avg. daily volume: USD 30-50m Ref. source: GFI broker fixing <GFIU> Trading hours: 10:00-15:00 Kiev time Offshore UAH products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Avg. ticket size: USD 2-5mn Tenors: <3Y Bid/ask spread: UAH 0.05-0.1 Avg. daily volume: USD 25-50mn Page 104 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies United Arab Emirates The UAE dirham, which was introduced in 1973, was initially set under a currency board agreement against the USD at a rate of 3.97473/USD +/-1%. It widened to a range of +/- 2.5% in 1974 and remained in place until early 1978 when the peg was changed to the SDR at a rate of 4.7619/SDR +/-2.25%, with the USD remaining as the intervention currency. However, in line with several other GCC countries, the UAE formalised the USD peg in 2003 at a rate of 3.6725. USD/AED exchange rate The Central Bank of UAE (CBUAE) has a mandate to support the national economy and stability of the dirham. The Bank is led by a Chairman and seven members who are responsible for the functioning and oversight of CBUAE’s seven departments. In October 2010, CBUAE appointed four renowned economists and business leaders, Robert Mundell, David Dodge, Joseph Yam and Sir John Bond to its international advisory council. Source: Deutsche Bank USD/AED and AED 3M implied yield The dirham is a fully deliverable and convertible currency. Source: Deutsche Bank Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 105 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The Central Bank of the UAE regulates exchange rate policy and is responsible for implementing monetary policy (http://www.centralbank.ae). Monetary policy is conducted using a series of instruments: minimum reserve requirements, swap operations, advances & overdraft facility for banks, prudential regulation and the issuance of Certificates of Deposits (CDs). The system of CD issuance was overhauled in November 2007. The CBU can issue AED CDs at maturities from 1W to 5Y with daily issuance of tenors from 1W to 1Y and monthly issuance of longer tenors. The CBU can also issue CDs denominated in USD and EUR. The CBU acts as custodian for CDs. Local banks can repo their CDs with the CBU at the repo rate. Banks can also access USD funding with the CBU using the AED CD repo with terms up to 3M. In September 2008 the CBU introduced a mechanism to add liquidity to the system. Banks are now able to borrow from the CBU against their reserve requirements The UAE dirham is a fully accessible, fully convertible currency. AED products FX spot Avg. ticket size: USD 25-100mn Bid/ask spread: AED 0.0001 Avg. daily volume: USD 1-2bn Ref. source: Central Bank of UAE <CBEM> Trading hours: 7:30-15:00 London FX forward/swap Avg. ticket size: USD 50mn (FX forwards); USD 50mn (FX swaps) Liquid tenors: <5Y Bid/ask spread: AED 0.0003 in 1y forwards Avg. daily volume: USD 1bn Ref. source: Reuters Page <DBMEFWD> FX options Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn Liquid tenors: <1Y Bid/ask spread: 1.5 vol IRS Avg ticket size: USD 5-15k DV01 Bid/ask spread: 5-10bp Fixing: 3M EIBOR Ref. source: Reuters page <AEIBOR=> Page 106 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Argentina Argentine FX arrangements were plagued by monetary mismanagement and inflation throughout most of the twentieth century, resulting in periodic massive currency devaluations. The Peso Ley replaced the Peso Moneda Nacional in 1970 at a rate of 100 to 1, which was itself replaced by the Peso Argentino at a rate of 10,000 to 1 in 1983. In 1985, this was again replaced by the Austral at a rate of 1,000 to 1, though this soon collapsed via hyper-inflation. Beginning April 1st 1991, Argentina operated a currency board system with the Peso (converted from the Austral at 10,000 to 1) pegged to the dollar at the rate of one to one, every peso in principle backed by hard currency reserves. The “Convertibility Plan,” was conceived to solve Argentina’s chronic inflation problems, and throughout the first half of the 1990s the system underpinned an economic boom, with inflation declining to single digits. However, as the decade wore on, the real appreciation of the dollar placed the system under strain as REER became increasingly overvalued. The combination of persistent budget imbalances, negative terms of trade shocks, and inflexible monetary policy eroded credibility and culminated with the abandonment of the currency peg on January 6th, 2002. Floating the currency led to a 70% devaluation of the Peso, taking it from one of the most overvalued to one of the most undervalued currencies in the world. Since then, the exchange rate has been tightly managed and capital flows strictly controlled. As the economy recovered from the 2002 crisis, inflation increased once again (albeit under-reported by the government since early 2007), undermining the competitiveness of the exchange rate. During the global crisis of 2008, the authorities faced the challenge of allowing the currency to depreciate but without triggering a sharp currency substitution. The Central Bank of Argentina (BCRA) embarked on a managed depreciation path, which by the middle of 2009 was successfully completed. Since the beginning of 2010, the Central Bank has followed a new, more gradual, depreciation trend significantly below inflation. But in mid-2013 a faster pace of depreciation was introduced in an attempt to compensate accumulated real appreciation of more than 30% since 2010. With inflation at 25% YoY, and the depreciation pace at some 70% YoY, the major risk is inflation acceleration and the needed depletion of reserves to back up gradualism. In our view, this might eventually demand a more aggressive depreciation strategy together with tighter policies. The currency is not convertible, and most USD inflows are subject to a mandatory, unremunerated one-year deposit at the Central Bank. In November 2011, the government stepped up the restrictions to trade in the Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. local currency market and forced some repatriation of funds (see below). In addition all types of USD hoarding were prohibited and severe restrictions were imposed on capital outflows. Regulations will likely remain restrictive, negatively affecting liquidity in NDF and options markets. USD/ARS spot and REER 7.0 35 6.0 40 5.0 45 4.0 50 3.0 55 2.0 60 1.0 65 0.0 Jan-06 Jan-08 Jan-10 USD/ARS, (lhs) 70 Jan-14 Jan-12 REER, (inverted rhs) Source: Deutsche Bank 3M and 12M USD/ARS (offshore) NDF implied yield 150 130 110 90 70 50 30 10 -10 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 ARS 3m Implied Yield Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 ARS 12m Implied Yield Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Finance LP, BIS 1M USD/ARS implied volatility and realized volatility 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 ARS 1m Implied Vol Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 ARS 1m Realized Vol Source: Deutsche Bank Page 107 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The BCRA (website http://www.bcra.gov.ar/) is the main regulator for the banking industry. The Comisión Nacional de Valores (CNV, website http://www.cnv.gov.ar ) is the local financial market regulator, overseeing in particular all public offerings. Foreign exchange transactions in the Mercado Unico y Libre de Cambios are governed by the Foreign Exchange Penalty Law, the Decree 616/2005 and Exchange Regulations created by BCRA. Until 2009, a summary of the FXregulations in force was published monthly by the Central Bank (see Comunicado P49561 published on 15 September 2009). th The most relevant taxes are income tax, financial transactions tax (0.6%) on all debit and credit transactions in current accounts, value added tax and withholding tax in certain cases. In November 2008, the structure of the local market changed significantly with the nationalization of the pension fund system. After controls were tightened in November 2011 the FX market became very much an exchange with the Central Bank Onshore ARS products FX spot Trade-related transactions: Exporters have the obligation to sell USD receipts within time limits depending on product, up to one year. Some agriculture products, in particular those affected basic consumption goods, like wheat and corn, still need export authorization. Importers are allowed to tap the spot market with no formal restriction provided linked to an import. Imports however are severely controlled. Foreign debt financing must be sold in the FX market. Corporates can buy USD to pay for interest and capital amortization upon Central Bank authorization (but issuance might be susceptible to deposit requirement depending on objective of financing). Banks are responsible for compliance with the regulations with penalties for non-compliance. Non trade-related transactions: USD inflows are subject to a one year 30% mandatory unremunerated deposit at the Central Bank with a few exceptions (e.g., initial issuance of public stock, Treasury debt, Provincial debt and Corporate debt, and FDI). Argentine residents are allowed to sell USD 2m per month to purchase local assets without having to make the 30% deposit described above. In November 2011, the government introduced a series of measures with the purpose of increasing both the supply of USD and the control in the local FX market. First, it demanded the full repatriation of export receipts from mining/extracting activities. Then, it eliminated the right of insurance companies to hold investments abroad. Afterward, it set the obligation for foreign companies investing in the country to liquidate their hard currencies holdings through the local market in order to be able to eventually take their investment abroad and introduced tighter restrictions USD purchases in excess of USD250k a year despite maintaining the legal limit at USD 2mn a month for individuals and corporations. Additionally, it established that any USD purchase requires prior authorization by the national tax authority (AFIP), based on income declarations and state purpose. Finally, the BCRA demanded that the banks inform any foreign transaction with an anticipation of 10 business days. In November 2011 the authorities prohibited any buying of USD for hoarding, and introduced the need of authorization from the Central Bank and the tax authority for any other transaction in hard currency but without defining a clear rule. Some buying for tourism related spending is still allowed but after approved by the tax authority following also a not well defined rationing criterion. Debt services are usually authorized while profit and remittances are only very gradually and discretionary approved. Page 108 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Liquidity: Moderate (in SIOPEL – see below - and broker markets) Avg. ticket size: USD 1mn Bid/ask spread: ARS 0.002 Avg. daily volume: USD 250m Ref. source: Reuters page <ARS=>, <ARS/1> Trading hours: 10:00 am- 3:00 pm Buenos Aires time. Local NDF/Futures Market Regulatory: Participants can trade freely in local NDFs and trades are settled in ARS. The BCRA maintains a fixing (Tipo de Cambio de Referencia) which is only used for onshore contracts (Bloomberg ticker: ARORREX Index, Reuters: ARS=BCRA). The Methodology is described in Comunicación A3500, March 1st 2002. The BCRA solicits bid/ask quotes via the SIOPEL system of the MAE (Mercado Abierto Electronico), in three rounds of 15 minutes between 10am-11am, 12pm-1pm and 2pm-3pm. The fixing is obtained as the arithmetic average of the fixings in each of the individual periods. The fixing for each individual period is calculated by ordering all the bid/ask quotes and taking the simple average of the bid and ask of the inside market (i.e. after removing all pairs of overlapping bid-ask quotes), and rounded to 4 decimal places. To limit dislocations between the onshore and the offshore markets, in 2008, the BCRA started offering onshore contracts at the EMTA fixing (the BCRA undertakes forward intervention as part of its FX policy), but the A3500 fixing remains the onshore market standard. Avg. size ticket: USD 1mn Tenor: Liquidity up to 12 months with some trades up to 18 months. Bid/ask spread: ARS 0.004 for first 3 months, wider for longer tenors Avg. daily volume: USD 150 - 200mn normally Fixing: Bloomberg ticker: ARORREX Index, Reuters: ARS=BCRA Offshore ARS products Non-Deliverable Forwards and Options The offshore fixing is calculated according to the EMTA ARS Industry Survey Rate – ARS03- (full methodology at www.emta.org) based on a daily survey of local FX spot market banks and published daily on the EMTA website (Bloomberg: EMTAARS Index, Reuters: ARSMCMEEMTA=). The survey polls up to 14 financial institutions active in the local FX market, beginning around 12pm, for actual bid/ask rates (to 4dp) in current standard market size T+0 settlement. In the event of multiple categories of exchange rate transactions, that which applies to the settlement of FXrelated financial contracts in the domestic banking system must be chosen. In the event of obtaining fewer than 5 quotes, a follow-up survey is conducted later in the afternoon. For all quotes, the mid-point is calculated. With more than 8 responses the top and bottom 2 mid-quotes are discarded, and the arithmetic mean calculated. With 5 (inclusive) to 8 (exclusive) quotes, the top and bottom 1 are discarded before averaging and rounding to the 4 decimal place. The fixing is published by EMTA around 1pm Buenos Aires time, but later if a follow-up survey is required. An alternative, back –up survey methodology is also specified (EMTA ARS Indicative Survey Rate – ARS04) in the event that the Industry survey cannot be calculated. th Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 109 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) ISDA documentation. Standard docs available at EMTA (www.emta.org) Liquidity: Poor Very poor Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn USD 5mn Bid/ask spread: 50bp (in 1m tenor) 5 vols Avg. daily volume: USD50mn USD 10m biweekly Ref. source: LATAMNDF=DBNY, Bloomberg: DBLM1<GO> LATAMNDF=DBNY Fixing: www.emta.org/aservices/, Reuters:ARSMCMEEMTA=, Bloomberg:EMTAARS Index Source: Deutsche Bank Cross-currency Swaps USDARS USDCER Liquidity: Very Poor Very poor Avg. ticket size: USD 2mn USD 2mn Bid/ask spread: 300bp 500bp Avg. daily volume: USD 2mn USD 2mn Fixing: www.emta.org/aservices/ Reuters: ARSMCMEEMTA= Bloomberg: EMTAARS Index CER fixing Bloomberg CER Index or ARCECOES Index. Reuters: .CER Source: Deutsche Bank Government bond market Treasury bonds Regulatory: Banks have limits on the amounts they can hold. There are no such restrictions for onshore or offshore investors. The majority of ARS denominated bonds are still CER-adjusted (inflation linked), although in 2007 a nominal 5Y bond was issued (BONAR ARS V) in the amount of USD500mn. Recent ARS-denominated issues from the Treasury have been floating rate notes linked to BADLAR (average deposit rate) following a gradual trend of retiring CER exposures. The Treasury has also issued USD denominated bonds, some of which are under local law and some under NY or UK law. Liquidity: Moderate Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn notional Bid-ask spread: USD 0.25 in price Avg. daily vol.: USD 300-400mn Central Bank Paper Regulatory: Page 110 There are two types of paper: LEBACs, which are zero-coupon bills with maturity up to 2 years, and NOBACs, which are floaters, linked to the local BADLAR rate (mostly, although there are a few fixed rate bullet bond NOBACs), with quarterly coupons and a maturity of up to 3 years. The bonds have been issued in connection with the BCRA’s liquidity management and sterilization of foreign exchange intervention. In August 2007, the Central Bank changed the Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies regulations for NOBACs and LEBACs so that foreign investors can no longer hold the new issues of this paper. The new issues are only clearable in the local clearing system CRYL (although in principle the government could still issue Euroclearable paper if it desired, so far new issues since the new regulations have all been CRYL-clearable paper). Foreign investors can still participate in the secondary market for existing issues with no changes in regulations, and there are no limits on the amounts of such paper that can be held. Deposit Regulatory: No restrictions, but banks have limitations on the usage of USD deposits and must comply with liquidity requirements. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 111 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Brazil The Brazilian Real (BRL) was created in 1994 after multiple devaluations and decades of severe depreciation under the chronically high inflation of the late 1980’s and early 1990’s. It initially followed a narrow target zone regime as an anchor for inflation. However, given the widening current account gap of 1994-98, this dollar peg became another casualty of the Russian crisis and in January of 1999 the BRL began to float. Unfavorable commodity prices and internal political complications kept the currency under pressure for years with a peak reached in late 2002, when the leftwing party PT won the Presidential elections and the USD/BRL overshot to around 4.0. The risk factors started to align in favor of BRL appreciation since 2003. Prudent macroeconomic and marketfriendly policies (including a fiscal responsibility law and a credible inflation target regime) re-established confidence, while recovering commodity prices engineered a massive trade balance improvement. The country’s external debt was dramatically reduced to a net surplus and Brazil earned investment grade status. More recently, as the country persisted on this path it quickly recovered from the 2008 crisis, experiencing a fast rebound in portfolio flows. Central bank interventions (via spot and cross-currency swaps) aimed at taming volatility have been relatively successful. The BRL is not convertible but except for the stress period during the 2008 financial crisis, the convertibility premium has remained near zero. Both local registration and custodians are required to transact in local markets. Bureaucracy has been reduced (though not eliminated) and the onshore short-dated futures contracts and NDFs are very liquid. Liquidity drops drastically for tenors longer than 1Y, given the competition from the widely traded local swaps curve. Options are traded onshore (at the BM&F) and offshore with liquidity concentrated in tenors up to 1Y. The weighted average (ex-outliers) of spot transactions (PTAX) is the fixing for USD-linked bonds, and all derivatives instruments. The cross-currency swaps market (USD onshore x CDI rates) is dominated by the Central Bank via intervention and registered at CETIP (a non-profit clearing house). Otherwise, instruments are traded OTC. ). Given the recent changes in the financial landscape the IOF tax, originally applicable to a variety of foreign investments, has been reduced to zero (from 6%) to mitigate the selling pressures on the BRL. Page 112 USD/BRL spot and REER 90 2.5 100 2.0 110 1.5 120 1.0 130 140 0.5 150 0.0 Jan-06 Jan-08 Jan-10 160 Jan-14 Jan-12 USD/BRL, (lhs) REER, (inverted rhs) Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Finance LP, BIS 3M and 12M USD/BRL (offshore) NDF implied yield 20 15 10 5 0 Jan-06 Jan-08 Jan-10 BRL 3m Implied Yield Jan-12 BRL 12m Implied Yield Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Finance LP 1M USD/BRL implied volatility and realized volatility 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 BRL 1m Implied Vol Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 BRL 1m Realized Vol Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The National Monetary Counsel (CMN) is the main regulator of the Brazilian financial system. It has the responsibility of formulating monetary, exchange rate and credit policies with the objective of promoting macroeconomic stability and development. The CMN is currently composed of the Minister of Finance, the Minister of Planning and the President of the Central Bank (http://www.fazenda.gov.br/portugues/orgaos/cmn/cmn.asp). The Central Bank (CB) is the main executive office of the CMN and is responsible for implementing the policies broadly defined by the Counsel, supervise day-to-day banking activities and enforce the rules that ensure the stability of the financial sector. ( http://www.bcb.gov.br ). Resolution 2689 regulates non-resident activity. Spot transactions and physical inflows/outflows must be registered at the CB under a specific label (exports/import, portfolio flows, direct investments, etc, etc) and are subject to CB scrutiny under the appropriate FX legislation. The rules have been rapidly evolving over the last 5 years towards simplification and bringing the currency closer to full convertibility. The government recently reinstated IOF taxes for foreign flows related to certain transactions. Currently, certain fixed income and credit transactions are subject to a 6% tax rate, while FX derivatives transactions are taxed at 1%. Flows related to equities and bonds related to infrastructure projects, are not longer taxed. Onshore BRL products FX spot/forwards/swaps Regulatory: Onshore forwards trade via BM&F USD-futures contracts. Both contracts settle according to the PTAX (Bloomberg: BZFXPTAX Index, Reuters: BRLPTAX= and page BRFR, EMTA ID: BRL09). The fixing has been calculated by the Central Bank since 1999 as a volume-weighted average (ex-outliers) of spot transactions in the interbank market, and published daily at approximately 6pm Sao Paulo time on the Central Bank’s SISBACEN Data System under transaction code PTAX-800. The fix is calculated only on the basis of the offer side of the market only, for transactions with T+2 settlement. OTC contracts are allowed, but the vast majority of business is done instead through futures (BM&F). Liquidity: Very good Avg. ticket size: USD 1mn in spot, USD 5mn in the first future Bid/ask spread: 5bp in both spot and the first future Avg. daily volume: USD 1bn in spot and USD 13bn in the futures Ref. Source: Reuters Page <BRL=> IRS – DI Futures Regulatory: For DI futures, offshore investors must open special non-resident accounts. Liquidity: Very Good Avg. ticket size: BRL 50K/DV01 Tenor: 1M – 7Y (the most liquid contracts are for January expiry up tp 5Y). Bid/ask spread: 2bp Ref Source: Bloomberg ODA <Comdty.> CT Fixing: Floating rate is o/n CDI rate (Bloomberg BZDIOVRA Index. In index form: IDIX3 Index (rebased version of IDIX Index) Short-term money market instruments (BA/CP/repo) Government bond Regulatory: For LFTs, LTNs, NTN-Fs, etc offshore investors must open special non-resident accounts. Liquidity: Good Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 113 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Avg. ticket size: BRL 25mn Bid/ask spread: 10bp normally. Depending on bond spread can range from 3-5bps to 30bps. Deposit Regulatory: For bank time deposits (CDB) and daily floating government bonds (LTF), offshore investors must open special non-resident accounts. Liquidity: Good Avg. daily volume BRL 2bn Offshore BRL products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Standard docs available at EMTA (www.emta.org) For offshore contracts, in the event of the unavailability of the PTAX fixing for whatever reason, two daily EMTA surveys are available as back-up fixings (EMTA BRL Industry Survey Rate – BRL12; and EMTA BRL Indicative Survey Rate – BRL13) available at www.emta.org Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: USD 10mn Bid/ask spread: 10bp (in first future) Avg. daily vol: USD 500mn Ref. Source: LATAMNDF=DBNY, Bloomberg: DBLM1<GO> Fixing: PTAX (Bloomberg: BZFXPTAX Index, Reuters: BRLPTAX= and page BRFR) Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Standard docs available at EMTA (www.emta.org) Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: USD 30/60mn Bid/ask spread: 0.6 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 2.5 bn Non-deliverable Swap (NDS) Regulatory: ISDA documentation applies. Liquidity: Very Good Avg. ticket size: BRL 50mn Tenor: 1m – 7Y Bid/ask spread: 3–5bp up to 2Y Fixing page: Bloomberg ODA <comdty.> CT Page 114 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Chile With the economy essentially closed to capital and trade flows, the exchange rate was fixed in the 1960s Regulated prices and multiple official rates with quotas were pervasive. This resulted in macroeconomic imbalances, budget deficits and high inflation. Although reforms began in the 1970s, the 1982 crisis exposed weaknesses and moral hazard in the banking sector. There followed a turnaround in monetary policy, with banking and bankruptcy reforms then the granting of full autonomy to the Central Bank of Chile (BCCh) in 1989. In 1991, monetary policy moved to inflation-targeting in the context of a managed exchange rate (bands). This was accompanied by other reforms such as tariff cuts, free trade agreements, anti-trust rules, banking regulation and privatization. FX bands were abolished in 1999, when the peso started to float freely – albeit with some continued intervention. The inflation target is 3% +/- 1%, with a two-year horizon. The BCCh carries out its monetary policy by influencing the daily (overnight) interbank interest rate known as camara, (see more below) via the liquidity credit line and the liquidity deposit. Regarding the former, commercial banks obtain funds from the BCCh at the TPM (policy rate) plus 25bp, an operation that requires collateral (repo). The latter involves holding commercial bank deposits at the BCCh for one business day, at the TPM minus 25bp. These stabilize interbank rates at TPM +/- 25bp. The BCCh has intervened to stabilize the market and, more recently, to prevent “excessive” peso strength, though rulebased. The spot FX market ranks third in Latin America in terms of liquidity and size, with trading in spot averaging approximately USD1.5bn daily. The NDF market is also deep, posting a daily trading average of around USD500mn, but liquidity is concentrated in the 1m-12m sector. The FX market is not taxed and currently there are no capital controls. The forwards settle T+2 and fix at the observado – the average of the previous day (BCCHILG on Reuters, at noon). FX options are also non-deliverable and liquidity is concentrated in vanilla. The re-investment of copperrelated trade flows is an important driver of the CLP, although speculative flows have increased in the past years due to the big swings in the policy rate. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. USD/CLP spot and REER 800 80 700 90 600 100 500 110 400 Jan-06 Jan-08 Jan-10 120 Jan-14 Jan-12 USD/CLP, (lhs) REER, (inverted rhs) Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Finance LP, BIS 3M and 12M USD/CLP NDF implied yield 8 4 0 -4 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 CLP 3m Implied Yield Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 CLP 12m Implied Yield Source: DB Global Markets Research, Bloomberg Finance LP 1M USD/CLP implied volatility and realized volatility 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 CLP 1m Implied Vol Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 CLP 1m Realized Vol Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP Page 115 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach The BCCh regulates the FX market (www.bcentral.cl). The regulator of banking activities is the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions (www.sbif.cl). Local banks can only operate interest and FX options that are previously approved by Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. Any uncovered leveraged position entails some capital cost to the bank. The regulatory framework in Chile keeps the local financial system relatively resilient to international jitters and also protects the corporate sector from FX fluctuations. In particular, i) Securitization of credit risk is restricted—credit risk is kept within the balance sheet; ii) Banks can hold positions only on some derivatives products—credit derivatives are not allowed and any FX and/or interest rate derivative contracts is required to pass an exhaustive process of authorization by the Superintendence of Banks and Financial Institutions; iii) the capital cost of an unhedged FX position is high. Foreign investors can invest in Chile by opening a custody account. The custodian bank has the responsibility of withholding and paying applicable taxes (4% withholding on coupons, and a 35% capital gain tax on some bonds), informing all transactions to the SII (local IRS) and the BCCh, maintaining the custody (ie. coupon payments), and opening accounts in USD and CLP. Certain foreign institutional investors can be exempt from the capital gain tax (selling has to be done through an exchange, Art. 106). There is also a capital gain tax exemption on central bank and treasury bonds issued after 2010 and traded through continuous auctions in an exchange (Art. 104). Onshore CLP products FX spot Regulatory: None besides notification for transactions over USD 10,000 (see above). Liquidity: Good Avg. Ticket size: USD 5mn Bid/ask spread: CLP 0.5 Avg. daily volume: USD 1.5bn (USD1.0bn in the electronic system and USD 0.5bn in the OTC) Ref. source: Reuters page <CHILJ> and Bloomberg <DBLM1> Daily Hours: 8:30am - 13:30pm; aftermarket liquidity low, 13:30pm - 17:00pm FX forward Regulatory: Same as for onshore spot market. Only local counterparties can participate, so offshore participants need local legal status. The forwards settle T+2 and fix at the dolar observado – the average of the previous day (BCCHILG on Reuters, at noon). Liquidity: Good up to tenors of 1Y. Longer-dated forwards are significantly less liquid. Avg. Ticket size: USD 5-10mn Tenor: Up to 1Y Bid/ask spread: Varies with the tenor: 1M CLP0.1, 3M CLP 0.20 and 1Y CLP 0.50 Avg. daily volume: USD 700mn normally Fixing: Bloomberg ticker: PCRCDOOB Index, Reuters ticker: CLPOB= Page 116 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies FX options Regulatory: No active local market yet, but the central bank has already granted approval to operations with derivatives. IRS CLP/UF (real rates) CLP/CAM (nominal rates) Regulatory: No regulations for offshore trades. Liquidity: Good Good Avg. ticket size: 10k DV01 10k DV01 Tenor: 6M – 20Y 6M – 10Y Bid/ask spread: 5-7bp 5-6bp Fixing page: The overnight inter-bank rate (ICP) is determined by the Asociación de Bancos e Financieras de Chile (http://www.abif.cl/menu-lateral/indicadores-ba promedio/icp_mes.htm). Ref source Bloomberg <DBCH> Source: Deutsche Bank Short-term money market instruments (BA/CP/repo) Regulatory: Entities with legal onshore status are allowed to access the onshore market (withholding taxes apply as specified above). Liquidity: Good Avg. daily volume: USD 1.0bn Government bond UF (real rates) CLP (nominal rates) Regulatory: Entities with a legal onshore status are allowed to access the onshore market (withholding apply as specified above) Liquidity: Avg. ticket size: Bid/ask spread: Avg. daily volume Ref. Source Good Good USD 10mn USD 10mn 8 –10bp for 5, 7 & 10Y, 5bp for 20Y 5bp 5 & 10Y USD 400mn Bloomberg <DBCH> and http://www.bolsadesantiago.com/ Source: Deutsche Bank Loan Regulatory: Entities with legal onshore status are allowed to access the onshore market (withholding taxes apply as above). Liquidity: Poor for foreigners, but reforms are under discussion to improve the situation. Currently, if a foreign entity issues debt onshore, pension funds must treat these bonds as external assets, and regulatory limits on external holdings are already binding. Spread Typically 90 – 140bp over govt bonds from 5 to 20Y (real rates) for a local AA / A Deposit Regulatory: Liquidity: Entities with legal onshore status are allowed to access the onshore market (withholding taxes apply as above). Good Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 117 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Offshore CLP products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: ISDA documentation. Standard docs available at EMTA (www.emta.org) Settlement is based on the dolar observado, (Bloomberg ticker: PCRCDOOB Index, Reuters ticker: CLPOB=, EMTA ID: CLP10). It is published daily by the Central Bank at 9:30am Santiago time, based on an average of the previous day’s trading, but used for settling transactions in the current business day. In the event of unavailability of the fixing, for offshore contracts, EMTA (www.emta.org) maintains the back-up EMTA CLP Indicative Survey Rate (CLP11) which it is standard to specify as an alternative fixing source. Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: USD10mn Bid/ask spread: CLP0.5 Avg. daily vol: USD 500-600mn Ref. Source: LATAMNDF=DBNY, Bloomberg: DBLM1<GO> Fixing page: Bloomberg ticker: PCRCDOOB Index, Reuters ticker: CLPOB= Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Regulatory: ISDA documentation. Standard docs available at EMTA (www.emta.org) Liquidity: Poor Avg. ticket size: USD10mn Bid/ask spread: 1.5 vol Avg. daily vol: USD30mn Ref. source: LATAMNDF=DBNY and Bloomberg <DBCH> Fixing page: Bloomberg ticker: PCRCDOOB Index, Reuters ticker: CLPOB= Page 118 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Colombia According to the Constitution, the Bank of the Republic (Banrep) has administrative, financial and technical autonomy, and its main goal is to preserve the purchasing power of the currency. It is responsible for the monetary and exchange rate policies, regulating credit conditions, managing international reserves, and it is the lender of last resort for the financial sector. Monetary policy operates under an inflation targeting regime with a two-year horizon. The Central Bank has also been keen on reducing FX volatility and it has often times resorted to capital controls in a “countercyclical” fashion, attempting to curb these flows during boom years in financial markets, and reversing such controls when international liquidity dries up. In the last three years, the Central Bank has intervened in the spot market with pre-announced daily minimum purchases of dollars and in the last three months of 2013 with a preannounced limit of reserves accumulation for the until the end of the year. We don’t expect the reserve accumulation program to be extended into next year. USD/COP spot and REER 2900 80 2700 90 2500 100 2300 110 2100 120 1900 130 1700 140 1500 Jan-06 Jan-08 Jan-10 USD/COP, (lhs) 150 Jan-14 Jan-12 REER, (inverted rhs) Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP, 3M and 12M USD/COP NDF implied yield 20 16 12 The spot market ranks fourth in Latin America in terms of liquidity and size. Since the peso is not fully convertible, the NDF market is the option for foreigners, posting a daily trading average of around USD800mn. While contracts exist for tenors between 1m and 12m, liquidity is concentrated in 1m (90% of the transactions) with bid/ask spread of around COP5 for a USD20mn ticket. The forwards settle T+2 and fix at the TRM—fixed by the government every day based on the weighted average exchange rate in the previous day. FX options market is very illiquid, even for vanilla options. 8 4 0 -4 -8 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 COP 3m Implied Yield Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 COP 12m Implied Yield Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP 1M USD/COP implied volatility and realized volatility 40 The local financial institutions are the main participants in the spot and forward markets, but private pension funds, the Treasury, and the CB are important players as well. It is important to note that limits on the foreign currency exposure of the financial sector institutions apply. For banks, their overall net foreign currency exposure cannot exceed 20% of their “tier 1 capital” if positive (long USD) (patrimonio tecnico-net worth) and 5% of their “tier 1 capital” if negative (short USD). The sum of all transactions involving foreign currency derivatives cannot exceed 500% of their “tier 1 capital”. 30 20 10 0 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 COP 1m Implied Vol Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 COP 1m Realized Vol Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 119 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach Banrep (http://www.banrep.gov.co/) conducts monetary and exchange rate policy. Investors are subject to withholding tax on interest income and capital gains. The rate for bonds of maturities of 5Y or more is 4%, while for bonds with lesser maturities is 7%. Income tax is currently 14% (withholding taxes are deductible from income tax), with the exception of investors domiciled where the government qualifies as “taxhavens”3. There is no tax treaty with US. There is also a 0.4% financial transaction tax that applies on all debit transactions (except those directly related to TES purcharse). There are plans to gradually eliminate the financial transactions tax. Onshore COP products FX spot/forwards Regulatory: NDF contracts trade onshore and offshore. Both settle based on the TRM (Tasa Representativa del Mercado - Bloomberg ticker: TRM Index, Reuters ticker: COTCRM=RR on reference page CO/COL03, EMTA ID: COP02). It is calculated and published daily by the Superintendencia Financiera de Colombia, a department of the Treasury. The methodology of the TRM is described in the Circular Reglamentaria Externa – DODM – 146, 21st September 2004, and the calculation is required according to article 80 of the Resolución Externa No. 8, 2002 (see www.banrep.gov.co/series-estadisticas/see_ts_cam.htm for details). The TRM is calculated as a weighted average of bid and ask T+0 transactions carried out by commercial banks, financial corporations, agents of the stock exchange, commercial financing companies (the latter two of which were added to the methodology on December 1st 2004), the FEN (Financiera Energética Nacional) and BANCOLDEX. The calculation must include transactions in Bogotá, Barranquilla, Cali and Medellín. The TRM for a given day is based on the FX transactions of the previous day and in the event of a holiday in either Colombia or the United States, a new TRM is not calculated and the previous day’s TRM remains in effect. In the event of unavailability of the fixing, for offshore contracts, EMTA (www.emta.org) maintains the back-up EMTA COP Indicative Survey Rate (EMTA ID: COP04) which it is standard to specify as an alternative fixing source. Local FX forwards recently started trading on the Bolsa de Valores de Colombia (BVC) as standardized contracts. Liquidity: Good Avg. Ticket size: USD20mn Bid/ask spread: COP3-5 Avg. daily volume: USD1.2bn Ref. source: Reuters Page <COP=> Short-term money market instruments (zero coupon, short-term TES) Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: USD1mn Avg. daily volume USD30mn Government bond (Local TES) Liquidity: Excellent Avg. ticket size: USD 5mn Bid/ask spread: 3bp on benchmark, 10bp on non-benchmark issues Avg. daily volume: USD6.0-7.0bn 3 Decree 2193 of 2013 lists the countries and territories classified as tax-havens. Page 120 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Note: As an alternative to FX-hedging fixed income positions, investors can also implement synthetic locally funded positions via structures which also remove convertibility risk associated with offshore funding. Offshore COP products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: ISDA documentation per EMTA (www.emta.org). See text above for fixing conventions. Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: USD20mn Bid/ask spread: COP5 Avg. daily vol: USD800mn Fixing page: Reuters: COTCRM=RR on page CO/COL03. Bloomberg ticker: TRM Index. Ref. Source: LATAMNDF=DBNY, Bloomberg: DBLM1<GO> Local TES NDF Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: 10K DV01 Bid/ask spread: 5bp Avg. daily vol: USD20mn Fixing page: www.infoval.com Ref. Source: Bloomberg DBCO <GO> IRS (COP/IBR) Liquidity: Good Avg. ticket size: 5K DV01 Bid/ask spread: 5bps <2y 7bps beyond Avg. daily vol: USD50mn Fixing page: Reuters COIBR=RR, Bloomberg COOVIBR Index. Ref. Source: Bloomberg DBCO <GO> Cross-currency swaps (USD/COP) Regulatory: ISDA documentation per EMTA (www.emta.org). Standard Contract: 6m USD Libor vs COP fixed with final exchange; net settled offshore. Liquidity: Moderate up to 5Y Avg. ticket size: USD10mn Bid/ask spread: 10bp normally Avg. daily vol: USD30mn Fixing page: Reuters COTCRM=RR on page CO/COL03. Bloomberg ticker: TRM Index. Ref. Source: LATAMNDF=DBNY Cross-currency swap (USD/UVR) – Inflation linked Regulatory: ISDA documentation per EMTA (www.emta.org). Standard Contract: 6m USD Libor vs UVR fixed with final exchange; net settled offshore. Liquidity: Moderate Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 121 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Avg. ticket size: USD5mn Bid/ask spread: 15bp normally Avg. daily vol: USD10mn Inflation Source: Bloomberg UVR Index. Reuters: COU= Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Liquidity: Poor Avg. ticket size: USD 20mm Bid/ask spread: 3 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 10mm Fixing page: Reuters COTCRM=RR on page CO/COL03. Bloomberg ticker: TRM Index. Ref. source: LATAMNDF=DBNY Page 122 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Mexico The FX regime changed from highly managed to essentially a free float after the December 1994 devaluation, although augmented with various rulesbased intervention schemes to manage volatility and reserve accumulation. Between August 1996 and June 2001, the Central Bank bought and sold USD via options and between February 1997 and June 2001 the Exchange Commission (comprised of representatives of the Finance Ministry and the Central Bank) established a mechanism to sell USD to moderate FX volatility by injecting liquidity during stressful periods. Under this scheme, the Central Bank auctioned MXN200m on a daily basis (three times a day). While in place, the system was used only 14 times, mainly between August 1998 and January 1999. The total amount of USD sold via this scheme was USD1.95bn. From May 2003, the Exchange Commission used a USD auction scheme to tame the rate of FX reserve accumulation while still targeting an adequate liquidity buffer for the financial system. This was put in place to deal with higher and more volatile oil prices and the potential adverse consequences for the peso. Nevertheless, despite the mechanism, reserves were accumulated to a peak of USD87bn. On July 21st 2008 this mechanism was suspended indefinitely after a strong appreciation of the peso against the dollar during the first half of 2008 which eventually took the USD/MXN to a low of 9.85 in early August 2008. However, soon after attempting to stem an appreciation, the currency suffered strong depreciating pressure as a result of the global financial crisis in 2008. This prompted the surfacing of significant FX derivatives losses at Mexican corporates, creating strong USD demand to hedge these positions. The Mexican authorities announced a range of interventions. A rule-based USD-auction scheme was put in place, as used in the late 1990s, whereby USD400mn would be offered to the market daily in the event that the depreciation at any point during the day versus the previous day exceeded 2%. However, the volatility was so extreme that the auctions were also supplemented with a daily non-contingent USD 100mn auction (discontinued as of October 1 2009) and various ad hoc auctions on the most volatile days. The mechanism has not been re-instated in spite of the recent rise in currency volatility. USD/MXN spot and REER 16 60 15 70 14 80 13 12 90 11 100 10 110 9 8 Jan-06 Jan-08 Jan-10 USD/MXN, (lhs) 120 Jan-14 Jan-12 REER, (inverted rhs) Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP, 3M and 12M USD/MXN FX Forward implied yield 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 1 -1 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 MXN 3m Implied Yield Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 MXN 12m Implied Yield Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP 1M USD/MXN implied volatility and realized volatility 80 60 40 20 0 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 MXN 1m Implied Vol MXN 1m Realized Vol Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP st Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 123 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory framework and approach According to Article 21 of the Bank of Mexico Law, FX policy is designed by the Exchange Commission, which is composed of officials from the central bank (including the Governor) and the ministry of finance. Policy implementation relies on the central bank (www.banxico.org.mx). The Bank of Mexico also designs and implements monetary policy to ensure price stability. Foreign investors are exempt from withholding tax in government securities (Article 196 of the Income Tax Law). However, interest income generated from investing in any other instrument placed among investors is subject to 4.9% tax (Article 195 of the Income Tax Law). Regarding investors from countries with which Mexico has a double taxation treaty, there is no withholding tax on TIIE swaps or derivative transactions involving sovereign debt instruments in markets recognized by Mexder (Mexico’s derivative exchange). A 4.9% withholding tax must be paid by foreign banks and foreign investors obtaining interest income from credit instruments. There is no withholding tax for foreigners when dealing in derivatives linked to FX. Regarding investors from countries with which Mexico does not have a double taxation treaty, there is a 10% withholding tax for financing entities, pension/retirement funds and foreign investment funds with registry in the Ministry of Finance. This rate is also applied to foreign individuals and corporations. Additionally, the tax rate for credit investments is 10% instead of 4.9%. Regarding tax havens, the withholding tax for registered foreign pension/investment funds changes to a minimum of 10%, while that for individuals and companies rises to 40%. Also, there is no withholding tax on TIIE swaps or derivative transactions involving sovereign debt instruments in markets recognized by Mexder (Mexico’s derivative exchange). MXN transactions can be settled in CLS. MXN products FX spot Regulatory: No restrictions. The Mexican peso trades in the forward market as a deliverable contract and hence no fixing is required for settlement. Nevertheless, for various purposes the Central Bank of Mexico does publish a daily fixing known as the FIX (Bloomberg ticker: MXFT Index, Reuters USDMXNFIX2=. Also available in Reuters are T+0 and T+1 fixings USDMXNFIX=, USDMXNFIX1=). The FIX is based on a survey market participant of the prevailing rates T+2 settlement of USD/MXN. The FIX is published daily every Mexican business day, at 12pm. The FIX is used, for example, as the metric to trigger rule-based FX market interventions undertaken by Banxico, and has also been used as a reference rate for various onshore contracts, but no relevance for settling FX market transactions themselves. Liquidity: Very Good Avg. Ticket size: USD 5 -10mn normally, with tickets for as large as USD 50mn Bid/ask spread: MXN 0.005 - 0.01 Avg. daily volume: USD 11bn [around 30% onshore] Ref. source: Reuters Page <MXN=> Daily hours: Major activity between 8:00am to 15:30pm NY, although the market is open 24 hours FX forward/swap market/long-dated FX forward Regulatory: No restrictions; uniquely in LatAm FX forwards are deliverable Liquidity: Good up to 2Y normally, with a curve out to 5Y Avg. ticket size: USD 20mn Avg. daily volume: USD 2bn recently Bid/ask spread: 5bp in USD (offshore market) Page 124 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Ref. source: MXNFWD=DBNY, Bloomberg: DBLM1<GO> IRS market Regulatory: ISDA documentation Liquidity: Good out to 10Y normally, poor beyond Avg. ticket size: MXN120mn in 10Y; MXN300mn in 2Y, MXN250mn in 5Y Tenor: Up to 30Y. More liquid contracts: 2Y, 5Y and 10Y. Floating rate is 28d TIIE. Bid/ask spread: 2bp Fixing page: Float fixing. Bank of Mexico (www.banxico.org.mx). Bloomberg: MXIBTIIE Index. Short-term money market instruments Regulatory: The interbank funding market is for local banks or brokerage houses. There is legislation permitting Repo and securities lending, but these markets have not yet taken off. Government bond market (Cetes – short-term T-bills) Regulatory: No restrictions. Foreigners can participate in primary auctions. Liquidity: Average (medium) Avg. ticket size: MXN100mn Avg. daily vol: MXN 5bn normally Bid/ask spread: 2bp normally Reuters page: MXCT=DEBK (DB Contribution) Government bond market (fixed rate nominal bonds) Regulatory: No restrictions. Foreigners can participate in primary auctions. Liquidity: Excellent in benchmark tenor Dec 24, good in Dec 18 & Jun 27 & average (mid to low) in other tenors. Avg. ticket size: MXN50mn Avg. daily vol: MXN 9 to 10bn Bid/ask spread: 2bp for liquid tenors, 3-4 bp for illiquid tenors Reuters page: MXBN=DEBK (DB Contribution) Government bond market (inflation-linked bonds) Regulatory: No restrictions. Foreigners can participate in primary auctions. Liquidity: Fair in 30Y; low in the rest Avg. ticket size: MXN20mn Avg. daily vol: MXN 500mn Bid/ask spread: 4bp normally Reuters page: MXUD=DEBK (DB Contribution) FX Option Liquidity: Moderate Avg. ticket size: USD 30/50 mn Bid/ask spread: 0.55 vols Avg. daily vol: USD 1.5bn Fixing page: Deliverable Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 125 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Peru According to the Constitution the Central Bank of Peru (BCRP) is autonomous, aiming at price stability. The BCRP is responsible for managing the monetary and exchange rate policies. Monetary policy is carried out under an inflation-targeting regime. The inflation target is 2% +/- 1% and applies to inflation (Lima CPI) throughout the year—not only for year-end inflation. The main instrument of monetary policy is the BCRP’s overnight reference interest rate. In addition the bank also targets the interest rates on overnight repo loans and interest rates paid on overnight deposits made by financial sector institutions in the BCRP. USD/PEN spot and REER 4.0 70 3.7 80 3.4 90 3.1 100 2.8 110 2.5 Jan-06 Jan-08 Jan-10 USD/PEN, (lhs) The exchange rate operates in a floating regime with active BCRP intervention. Exchange rate policy is aimed at limiting extreme volatility and maintaining a high level of international reserves without defending any specific FX level. As in many other countries, limiting volatility and maintaining international reserves are important to moderate the impact from external shocks, but they are critical in Peru because of the still high level of financial dollarization in the banking sector. Intervention in the exchange rate market is done directly in the spot market, or by auctioning USD-linked CD’s (BCRP sells CDRs or buys CDLD). Although there are no capital controls, the monetary authority often manages the reserve requirements on deposits of nonresidents in the local financial sector to limit foreign portfolio investment in local markets. The bottom line is that, for all practical purposes, PEN is not a freefloating currency and the monetary authority highly influences its parity against the USD. The daily market turnover is approximately USD450mn, with an average ticket size of USD20mn and a bid/ask spread of around 20bp. Onshore forward market is settled in PEN and it is mainly concentrated in 1m instruments. The offshore NDF market posts a daily trading average of USD250mn. While contracts exist for tenors between 1m and 12m, liquidity is concentrated in 1m (with bid/ask spread of 30bp in yield for a USD20mn ticket). The offshore forwards settle T+2 and the fixing rate is the intercambiario midprice published around noon local time. FX options market is yet to be developed. Page 126 120 Jan-14 Jan-12 REER, (inverted rhs) Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP, 3M and 12M USD/PEN NDF implied yield 12 8 4 0 -4 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 PEN 3m Implied Yield Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 PEN 12m Implied Yield Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP 1M USD/PEN implied volatility and realized volatility 25 20 15 10 5 0 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 PEN 1m Implied Vol Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 PEN 1m Realized Vol Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory Framework Banco Central de la Reserva del Peru is responsible for the country’s monetary and exchange rate policies (www.bcrp.gob.pe/). The banking, insurance and pensions sectors are regulated by the Superintendencia de Banca, Seguros y AFP (www.bcrp.gob.pe/). Over the last many years investors (local and foreign) have been exempt of taxes on their capital gains (for local or foreign firms or persons the tax rate is 30%). Since January 1st, 2010, foreign investors are subject to 5% capital gain taxes if the transaction takes place at the Peruvian stock and 30% if the transaction is OTC. Central Bank and Government bonds are exempt. There is a tax on financial transactions (ITF) on the cash amount of all financial transactions (in domestic or foreign currency), but it is gradually being reduced. Onshore PEN products FX spot/forwards Regulatory: NDF contracts trade onshore and off, and are settled against the PEN Interbank Average (Source: www.sbs.gob.pe, Bloomberg Ticker: PSSADATA Index, EMTA ID: PEN05). Various fixes are calculated daily by the Superintendencia de Banca y Seguros. Liquidity: Good Avg. Ticket size: USD10-20mn Bid/ask spread: 20bp Avg. daily volume: USD 1bn Ref. source: Reuters Page <PEN=> Daily hours: 9:00am to 13:30pm local time Government bond Regulatory: No restrictions. Bonds can be settled locally (in the local custodian) in PEN or offshore in USD. There are also global depository notes (GDNs) available which are euroclearble Liquidity: Fair, most active participants are the local pension funds Avg. daily volume: USD40mn Avg. ticket size: PEN5mn Bid/ask spread: 10bp in yield Offshore PEN products Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) Regulatory: ISDA documentation. The NDF fixing is the DATATEC fixing, also known as tipo de cambio profesional de dólar norteamerica. The fixing is based on the transactions executed in the local DATATEC system between 9:00am (recently Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 127 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies modified from 9:30am) and 13:30pm, taking a weighted average by size of transaction, rounding to 4 decimals. Participants in this wholesale market comprise banks, financial companies, Banco de la Nación and the Central Bank (BCRP), for transactions in excess of USD0.5m. If the DATATEC fixing cannot be calculated the fixing is calculated as the simple average of the interbank exchange rate reported on Reuters page PDSC again between 9:00am and 13:30pm. In the event of unavailability of the fixing, EMTA maintains the back-up EMTA PEN Indicative Survey Rate (EMTA ID: PEN04) which it is standard to specify as an alternative fixing source in the NDF documentation, available at www.emta.org. Liquidity: Moderate Avg. ticket size: USD20mn Bid/ask spread: 30bps Avg. daily vol: USD300mn Ref. Source: LATAMNDF2=DBNY, Bloomberg: DBLM1<GO> Fixing page: www.sbs.gob.pe Cross currency swap: Regulatory: ISDA documentation. Standard docs available at EMTA (www.emta.org) Standard Contract: 6M Libor vs. PEN nominal fixed; net settled at maturity; with final exchange; settled offshore in USD Liquidity: Moderate Avg. ticket size: USD10mn Bid/ask spread: 10bp Avg. daily vol: USD20mn Non-Deliverable Option (NDO) Liquidity: Very Poor Avg. daily vol: Page 128 < USD10mn Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Contributions by Armando Armenta Taimur Baig Robert Burgess Gustavo Canonero Kaushik Das Jed Evans Jose Faria Sameer Goel Siddharth Kapoor Perry Kojodjojo Juliana Lee Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 129 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Appendix 1 Important Disclosures Additional information available upon request For disclosures pertaining to recommendations or estimates made on securities other than the primary subject of this research, please see the most recently published company report or visit our global disclosure look-up page on our website at http://gm.db.com/ger/disclosure/DisclosureDirectory.eqsr Analyst Certification The views expressed in this report accurately reflect the personal views of the undersigned lead analyst(s). In addition, the undersigned lead analyst(s) has not and will not receive any compensation for providing a specific recommendation or view in this report. Drausio Giacomelli/Henrik Gullberg/Guilherme Marone/Mallika Sachdeva Page 130 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 19 December 2013 EM Currency Handbook 2014: Diverging Currencies Regulatory Disclosures 1. Important Additional Conflict Disclosures Aside from within this report, important conflict disclosures can also be found at https://gm.db.com/equities under the "Disclosures Lookup" and "Legal" tabs. Investors are strongly encouraged to review this information before investing. 2. Short-Term Trade Ideas Deutsche Bank equity research analysts sometimes have shorter-term trade ideas (known as SOLAR ideas) that are consistent or inconsistent with Deutsche Bank's existing longer term ratings. These trade ideas can be found at the SOLAR link at http://gm.db.com. 3. Country-Specific Disclosures Australia and New Zealand: This research, and any access to it, is intended only for "wholesale clients" within the meaning of the Australian Corporations Act and New Zealand Financial Advisors Act respectively. Brazil: The views expressed above accurately reflect personal views of the authors about the subject company(ies) and its(their) securities, including in relation to Deutsche Bank. 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The longer the maturity of a certain cash flow and the higher the move in the discount factor, the higher will be the loss. Upside surprises in inflation, fiscal funding needs, and FX depreciation rates are among the most common adverse macroeconomic shocks to receivers. But counterparty exposure, issuer creditworthiness, client segmentation, regulation (including changes in assets holding limits for different types of investors), changes in tax policies, currency convertibility (which may constrain currency conversion, repatriation of profits and/or the liquidation of positions), and settlement issues related to local clearing houses are also important risk factors to be considered. The sensitivity of fixed income instruments to macroeconomic shocks may be mitigated by indexing the contracted cash flows to inflation, to FX depreciation, or to specified interest rates - these are common in emerging markets. It is important to note that the index fixings may -- by construction -- lag or mis-measure the actual move in the underlying variables they are intended to track. The choice of the proper fixing (or metric) is particularly important in swaps markets, where floating coupon rates (i.e., coupons indexed to a typically short-dated interest rate reference index) are exchanged for fixed coupons. It is also important to acknowledge that funding in a currency that differs from the currency in which the coupons to be received are denominated carries FX risk. Naturally, options on swaps (swaptions) also bear the risks typical to options in addition to the risks related to rates movements. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. 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